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Starting seeds. The easy way - and the cheap way

Submitted by Lisa on Mon, 2010-02-08 12:40 Share/Save Share This
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  • container vegetables
  • easy care gardening
  • easy to grow
  • start vegetable seeds
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With vegetable gardening the hot new thing, you may want to try starting seeds this month.

I just did it with my preschool daughter (at right) and in the process, kept thinking about ways to make it easier. I do, after all, blog about easy-care gardening and I had to admit - this wasn’t a "plant it and forget it" kind of thing. But I did figure I could make the process more streamlined for those wanting to try it - what with vegetable gardening being a popular way to grow your own chemical-free produce for less and folks paying attention to the Obamas’ new White House Vegetable Garden.

The way I see it, you can start seeds the really easy way, but it’ll cost you more, or the slightly less easy way  — but it’ll cost you less. 

EASY (BUT MORE MONEY)

Of course, the easiest way to do everything these days is to just order it all online. Yes, it’s also the most expensive, so if you want to save money, skip to the next section.

I suggest you start by going to Google. Type in "seed starting supplies." You’ll come up with a bunch of catalog companies like Johnny’s Selected Seeds, Harris Seeds, Home Harvest Garden Supply, Growers Supply, Burpee or Park Seed. At any one of those sites, just buy the following supplies:

Supplies

Tabletop or freestanding grow light system/stand/cart ($60 and up, depending on how fancy the setup is).

Growing kit that includes soilless potting mix pellets, self-watering mat, seed cell tray, plastic dome, plant labels and seeds ($20 to $60). Some have heat mats, some don’t. The heat mats are supposed to make your seeds grow faster and healthier, but I’ve never used them and my seeds have always started fine. If you’re growing seeds in a cooler place and want to make doubly sure they germinate, go ahead and spring for the heat mat (if your kit doesn’t have one I found them sold separately between $26 and $28 at Planet Natural and Amazon).

Seeds (a few bucks a seed packet). Burpee says the best ones to start this early (Feburary) are swiss chard, broccoli, peppers, tomatoes and eggplant.

Light timer (Harris Seeds sells one for $12.25; Home Harvest sells one for $16.95).

Seed sower (I wish I had one for my daughter when she tried to plant the smaller seeds in the soil, but really, it’s a matter of preference. Burpee sells one for $1.95).

Trigger mister bottle, for watering new seedlings without drowning them  (Home Harvest sells them for $3.49).

Sharpie-type indelible marker (for writing on plant labels or the cell trays. Burpee sells them for $1.97 each).

Instructions

Read your gardening catalogs and wait for above materials to arrive. When they do, ollow the instructions that come with the products. The general overview, however, is that you add the required amount of water to the soil-plug-filled cell trays (until the soil is damp, then plant several seeds per cell, lightly covering them with some of the damp soilless mix. Put the plastic dome on the cell tray, set a light timer so that it remains on for 12 to 18 hours a day. Then leave the seed-starting station and go grab a beer. To keep soil damp, spray with mister bottle as needed.

SLIGHTLY LESS EASY (BUT LESS MONEY)

It should be noted that just about all supplies above (except for the grow lights and stand/cart) can also be bought at Home Depot, which is what I did.

I just followed the seed starting demo at the front of the store:

"Burpee Complete Growing System," said the sign, with the prices broken out for each of the components:

Supplies

Starting kit (Burpee Ultimate Growing Growing System). $19.95.

24-inch metal wire rack $19.95 (I skipped this since I planned to use a wire rack I already had at home, along with the plastic tie wraps (as seen in the display, to attach the top of the flurorescent light fixture to the bottom of the above wire rack shelf).

15 watt, 18-inch-long Philips plant & aquatic light (look for the green package). $7.97.

32. oz spray bottle (with the potted plants display at the front of the store). 96 cents.

General Electric 18-inch fluorescent under-cabinet light fixture. $9.77 (OK, this wasn’t on the sign. But it should’ve been. I had to go hunt it down in the store myself. Got detoured in the "shop light" aisle, with a fixture that not only cost $30, but which the Home Depot Guy and my husband said involved "hard wiring," "electrical tape" and a bunch of other stuff I immediately tuned out. Turns out the fixture I wanted, which plugs directly into the wall and has an on/off switch on it, was at the back of the store with home lighting fixtures, not commercial-grade light fixtures (in a completely different part of the store, more toward the front).

Now, this project would’ve taken me about half-an-hour to an hour to do (trip to the store included, and I was already there to buy a curtain rod) - except for the light fixture setback and one more thing: attaching the fixture to the shelf above. Because the folks at Home Depot had been able to attach their fluorescent light fixture to the underside of the metal wire shelf above using plastic tie-wraps, I assumed there were hooks or another device on top of the fixture that would allow for this. Nope. It just came with two holes, two screws and mounting instructions. Now had I just followed the directions and borrowed my husband’s cordless drill, this part of the project could’ve been over in 5 minutes My husband thinks the Home Depot People drilled holes into the fixture at the store so they could attach it with the tie wraps. But instead, because for some odd reason I’m averse to using power tools (probably because of my klutziness…I’m afraid I’ll lose an eye), I waited 20 minutes to a half-hour trying to figure out an ingenious way to attach the fixture to the metal shelving unit before giving up and watching my husband attach it in one minute with a cordless drill to the underside of wooden shelves in the basement. So… lesson learned. Just follow the instructions and use the screws. The only thing I haven’t done yet is put the light on a timer. Gotta do that soon. It’s a pain in the butt to remember to turn the lights on in the morning and off at night (I don’t need one more step in my daily routine).

And there you go - loads of family fun! Looking back, however, I’m really glad I did it. My 2 1/2-year-old asks me daily to "go see the plant babies" and there’s discernable progress each and every day. She mists the babies when they look dry, talks to them and pets them. She studies the seed packets, looking at the sprouting seeds and then looking back at the pictures of the plants they’ll grow into. But that’s life — and gardening — in a way. It never goes as planned, but you’re always glad you did it instead of say, watching TV. It’s kind of like choosing to participate in life.

Have you involved your children or grandchildren in your gardening? About.com Gardening Guide Marie Iannotti wrote a great post on it this month, called Raising Gardeners. Also check out the Martha Stewart Living write-up on starting seeds with kids Or, write in a tell me about your own experience!

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Want an easy kitchen garden on the deck or patio? Check out these container-ready lines for 2010

Submitted by Lisa on Tue, 2010-01-19 01:00 Share/Save Share This
Tags:
  • burpee home gardens
  • container garden
  • container vegetables
  • culinary couture
  • garden trends
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  • patio edibles
  • patio vegetable plants
  • plants that work in the kitchen
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So I moved to this new house with a huge, tiered deck out back. It’s white, with tons of white snow on top. It makes me hungry for the colors of summer veggie gardening – red peppers, orange carrots, yellow squash and purple eggplant.

So looking out the window, I get this idea for a kitchen garden on the deck, with container vegetables just a few paces away. I pictured my preschooler proudly starting seeds or picking cherry tomatoes for Mommy’s salad.

My next step was to do a little Internet shopping, to find good container veggie varieties (see my next post). But before I got very far, I learned there are whole new lines and marketing programs focused on this very topic. Figures, since veggie gardening and small-space or container gardening are two of the biggest garden trends.

Here’s some of what I found, so if you’re looking for the easy-care gardening way to fresh produce, you can anticipate some of what the garden centers might be carrying this spring.

Culinary CoutureTM line (at right)

Available as seeds or finished plants at garden centers this spring, this fashionable and flavorable line from Hort Couture includes ‘City Gardener’ faves for the patio like Fairy Tale eggplant,  a "tabletop" cucumber, Apache chili pepper, Redskin pepper, Snow White tomato and Totem tomato.

Plants that Work in the Kitchen

Offered by plant commercializer Novalis, this line of herbs for the home garden launched last year. Even though information on new varieties for 2010 is scarce, the Novalis Web site has a "Where to Buy" section you can check to see which garden center near you carries the line.

Burpee Home Gardens

Ball Horticultural Co. Has partnered with Burpee to market 40 new varieties as ready-made plants that used to only be offered through Burpee as seed, including Tumbler, the perfect variety for hanging baskets and planters. The Burpee Home Gardens Program Web site has a “Where to Buy” section you can check (closer to spring) to see which local garden center carries the line.,

Patio Edibles

From Vegetalis, a new company created by Floranova, this line offers veggies and herbs that can be grown on the windowsill or patio and mixed with ornamentals. Offerings include Little Sun Yellow, "the little tomato with the big fruiting habit," Tumbling Junior Yellow, a compact cherry-type yellow tomato with a lightly trailing habit, a small, white-fruited eggplant with a well-branched, compact habit, Gigantic Chive, a taller-than-usual chive designed to be a thriller in the middle of a mixed herb container, Sweet n’ Neat tomatoes with cocktail-size cherry tomatoes (in yellow and red) and the neatly-mounding Aristotle basil.

For more information, you can also visit Joyful Abode, GardenGirlTV and these other container gardening blogs: http://www.container-garden.info and http://containergardening.wordpress.com/.

So now I want to hear from you: What varieties of container veggies have you tried, and what worked out? Or, do you plan to grow veggies in containers this year? If so, what?

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Lisa's Bio

Lisa Hutchurson
Lisa Hutchurson, blogging on behalf of Tesselaar Plants, lives and gardens in Rochester, NY (zone 6a). With a family, a life and a job, she has mastered how to garden smarter – not harder. Read more…
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