Note: This post was written before I moved to my current location. But no point letting it go to waste!
After years of buying plants from nurseries, I am attempting
this year (2012) to grow most of my veggies from seed (with a considerable amount of
help from my mother-in-law who is in-the-know about these things). I planted ~100 tomato seeds (San Marzano
plums, Amish Paste plums, Black Krim, and some Tomatillos – OK, I know they
aren’t really tomatoes, but whatever). I
also planted about 30 pepper plants (assorted sweet peppers, jalapenos,
Hungarian hot wax).
They were sown into Pro-Mix Seed Germinating soil, which I
had pre-soaked in warm water to give them a good start.
Until the weather warms up a bit more, they need an indoor
lighting set up to provide the necessary warmth and light for germination and
growth. Here is the setup we have at the
farm – the sitting area gets rearranged every spring to accommodate the table
and light! The plants are spritzed daily
to keep them moist, and left under or even on top of the light to maintain
regular heating of the soil. Our cat,
Sugar Ray, enjoys the bit of warmth from the fluorescent lights, as they do not
give off too much heat.
So only a week later, the tomatoes have started to sprout
(no action from the peppers yet!). I’m
pretty excited about my first seedlings, but I need to baby them for a while
yet (admittedly, my mother-in-law mostly takes care of them as I’m elsewhere
working during the week) … they will likely need to be transplanted around
mid-April, and won’t get into the garden until the first week of June depending
on frost conditions.
They were transplanted into Solo cups with potting soil in
April to get a bit more growth.
Then into the garden during the last week of May as we were
experiencing a particularly warm period.
And here they are in mid-July in our new fenced-in garden area (see cardboard garden post). Looks like they
came out OK! It’s the tomatillos that
are the biggest (on the right side of the pic) but the Amish Paste and others
are plenty big themselves (to the left and behind the tomatillos).
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