Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Save your kitchen scraps?

Yes, Kitchen scraps are ideal for your composting. Instead of throwing away pounds of fruit and vegetable, coffee grinds plus filters, you can feed back the earth what chemicals are taking out. Just look at all the money you can save also. By shredding foods into smaller pieces, a faster decomposting will occur. And, remember those wet paper towels.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

List of Things to do for March

  • Fertilize perennials. Lime as soil test shows need.
  • Prune roses when vegetative buds swell. Fertilize and lime as test shows need.
  • Fend off hungry rabbits with dried blood, a commercial repellent or a mulch of prickly prunings.
  • Plant dormant roses, lilies, perennial and biennial plants.
  • Enjoy blooming snowdrops, squills, crocus, hellebores, primroses, heaths.
  • Start seeds of tender vegetables needing 10 to 12 weeks before settling out.
  • Plant hardy seeds marked "as early in the spring as the ground can be worked" as soon as a handful of soil from a spade's depth will crumble rather than making a soggy ball.
  • Root cuttings of sweet potatoes on a sunny windowsill.
  • Fertilize asparagus.
  • Prune, repot, propagate as plants resume active growth.
  • Begin fertilizing when active growth begins.
  • Keep potted spring-flowering bulbs and cyclamen, cinerarias, calcerolarias where nights are cool, as low as 50 degrees.
  • Begin a "rainy season" for cacti, watering once a week, to induce flowering.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

It's time to get seeds planted indoors

Starting Your Seeds Think clean if you plan to raise your own garden plants from seed. The dreaded damping-off fungus disease lurks in containers that haven't been thoroughly disinfected and in used potting media. In you are using last year's flats and cell packs, wash them with hot water and some bleach. Be sure to buy sterilized seed started. Fill your containers to about a half-inch from the top, then moisten the mix. If using a community pot, sprinkle the seeds on top, spacing them evenly, then cover as directed on the seed packet and spray them with tepid water to bring the seeds into good contact with the medium. Cover the container with a clear cover. Keep the medium moist but not soggy. If you are planting in 1 inch cells, use one or two seeds per cell, then remove the weakest one after germination. If using 3 inch cells, sow three seeds per cell, keeping the strongest one. Follow the directions on the seed packet for light exposure and temperature. Tender seedlings can be set outdoors in the sun, then brought indoors at night. Before the seedlings are to be planted in the garden, harden them off, whether you grew them or they came from a nursery. A cold frame is the ideal place, where they are covered and protected at night. Prepare your garden beds using fertilizer as shown by a soil test, plus lime, to bring the pH to that mandated by the plant, and compost or peat moss for organic matter. Seeds marked to plant out as early in the spring as the ground can be worked can be planted when the soil is no longer soggy and won't clump when worked. Be sure that danger of frost is past. Don't rush the season, If plants are chilled, time is wasted before they regain their vigor.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Native Plants

Native Plants A native plant is one that was growing naturally in a particular area before humans introduced plants from other places. Native plants adapted to the soil, moisture and weather conditions of their growing sites and have a positive effect on the environment. Many make excellent garden plants. Once established, native plants are practically maintenance-free. They require little or no irrigation or fertilization. They have adapted to the change of seasons in their habitat and are resistant to most pests and diseases. Native species are rarely invasive and have root systems that help rainfall to soak into the soil and reduce runoff and erosion. They thrive in areas where they are suited because they are part of an ecosystem that includes other plants, animals and microorganisms. Birds, butterflies and insects depend on native plants for food and shelter. Purchase native plants from a nursery that sells nursery-propagated native plants. Do not dig them up in the wild. They are hard to transplant and also may be protected by law.