Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Homesteading 101: It’s 3 Months Till Last Frost

The promised warm-up disappeared at our homestead last night. Instead, we got freezing rain on top of the snow late last night, leaving an ice rink to wake up to. I truly hate ice. People fall and get hurt. Fences don’t want to open. The animals are upset. But there is a bright light somewhere in it all.

In less than 3 months the last frost date for us will occur. Where our homestead is, our last frost date is April 15th. And yes, it often dips chilly in mid-April, as a last call out to winter going away.

It’s time to plan for spring. You might not be able to be outside right now, the ground may be frozen, but you can plan for your best garden ever.

And if you are stuck inside, it’s a good use of your time. Kids home? Get them involved!

What To Do Now:

  • Decide how much you want to plant. This is very important, as it determines the rest. Did you feel overwhelmed last year? Or did you feel you didn’t have enough growing?
  • Acquire pots. Whether you buy or get them free (Facebook Market, local plant nurseries) or you make them out of upcycled items such as berry containers and yogurt/sour cream cups, now is the time to get them. Make sure they are clean, and then you can tuck them away.
  • Start buying seeds. As well, go through your seed collection. See what you have already. While seeds do lose germination over time, most seeds don’t drop much in the first 1-2 years. Organize what you have on hand into categories. Make notes as well on what you have so you don’t double-buy. Have gardening friends? Maybe discuss what each of you has on hand if all you need is a couple of seeds.
  • Plan all changes to your garden, be it on paper or online. If you want to add beds, this is the time to sketch it out. If you wait till warm weather, you will be overwhelmed.
  • If you need to smother weeds, start stockpiling cardboard. As soon as the ground isn’t frozen, layer it thickly. This will help in removing weeds for when it warms up in late March.
  • Plan for preserving the harvest, especially if you are growing your gardens bigger this year. If you need more canning jars, keep an eye out for them. Or start saving for a dehydrator or a freeze-dryer, if this is in your plans. Consider checking out canning cookbooks from the local library for ideas – you can always snap photos of recipes to have on hand or check out all the water bath canning recipes we have posted.
  • If you have a greenhouse, consider cleaning it up and laying out trays with cups in them, and mixing up a big batch of potting soil, then filling them.
  • If you plan to start seedlings inside, take the time to set it up now and get your lights and trays ready.

The more you get done early, the more you free time you have when it is go time and warm again.

 

~Sarah

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Homesteading 101: How To Buy The Best Seeds

You might think this post is about what seed brands to buy from, but rather it is how to buy the best seeds for your garden, that will grow and reward you for your hard work with the best fresh produce.

With the new year and January comes seed catalogs. That are full of gorgeous full color photos of the dreamiest plants. There’s nothing like the Baker Creek Seeds Rare Earth catalog. It’s like the JC Penny toy catalog when I was a kid.

It is so easy to get lured in by this and buy buy buy, all those exciting possibles. If you are not careful, by February your kitchen table or counter is a pile of envelopes. With more seeds than you can possibly use in the coming season.

But that isn’t always bad……

But first you must think hard before you commit. This is what to ponder:

  • Grow Zone
  • Micro-Climate
  • Sunlight Exposure
  • Days To Grow
  • Heirlooms vs. F1 Hybrid Seeds
  • Local Seeds vs. National Seeds

All These Matter.

If you want a successful garden this spring/summer/early fall, all the above is important to consider.

Most seed companies will show the customer the standard information of average days to germinate (and best temperature to germinate at) , how to plant the seeds and how many days it normally takes to harvest.

Days to harvest is very important if you live (like we do) in a shorter season area.

To explain it:

This point covers days to grow, grow zone, micro-climate and sunlight exposure.

Let’s say you live where you have warm dry summers that extend into September, and the sun isn’t losing 2 minutes a day into darkness. You can grow 95 day sweet corn. You have time on your side.

But if you live where summer doesn’t get hot till after the 4th of July, and the days are shortening, and by end of August your gardens start getting shade by 2-3 pm, you must buy shorter season corn, maybe no more than 65 days. And you want a variety that grows shorter, putting more energy into the actual corn than the stalk.

Those 4 things affect your garden the most. If you are in a chilly micro-climate with short late summer days, you just cannot grow watermelon and cantaloupe easily in an open garden. No matter how much you wish it. Unless you put in a hoop tunnel to give more warmth.There are always hacks and tips to grow more in less than stellar climates.

Heirloom vs. F1 Hybrid Seeds:

Heirlooms are also known as open source seeds. These are the seeds you can save and plant the next year. These are what typically are traded at seed swaps. If like me, you will want to save some back yearly for the next season. This is a good practice to get into doing.

F1 hybrids are bred for certain things (such as blight or disease resistance, or features in the plant). You cannot save the seeds. They are NOT GMO’s. It is breeding, which is a far different thing. We as homesteaders and gardeners cannot buy GMO seeds – they are controlled by the large Ag industry and only a handful of crops are GMO (sugar beets, canola, soy, corn and soon wheat are the main eating crops, though there are a few more that are barely used). When you see Non-GMO on packaging, it is just marketing buzzwords.

The way I explain it is: F1’s will ensure you get fed, often the earliest in the season. Plant the F1’s first, then the heirloom seeds. If your heirlooms fail you will at least eat something. I treat it as a 50/50% for what I use. Don’t be afraid of F1’s. They exist because the heirlooms had issues and someone found a way to make it better. Please do not be scared of them.

Local Seeds vs. National Seeds:

While buying local (regional) seeds can seem a better choice, as in theory the seeds are bred for the conditions you face. However, the micro-climate you grow in can make that not work. It’s far better to match the seeds to what you want to grow, that will actually grow.

I buy from multiple companies each year. Some seeds come from a farm 2 miles away, others come from across the United States, such as Baker Creek Seeds. I base my purchases on personal experience that the seeds will germinate and grow strong, and not be filled with weed seeds. There is a regional company that I find has less than spectacular seeds, and charges a lot. People keep buying from them, then think it is their fault little germinated. In private I tell local people to not shop them.

What To Avoid and What To Buy:

Pre-packed packages of seeds at a low price can be attractive, but they come with a hidden cost. You will see these bantered about on prepper sites and on Amazon. It can seem like a real deal, but look at what you get. It is usually generic brands (dollar store quality), with low seed count – and you have no idea how old the seeds are, and odd things like peppers and melons, which you most likely cannot grow successfully. And add in turnips, radishes and collard greens…ask yourself would you grow and actually eat it all? If not, you have wasted money. This is an example, in where you get seeds such as Okra, something that only grows well in certain areas – and isn’t a fan favorite in general. But also, if a chunk of the seeds are late season harvesting, you need to think on that (pumpkins, winter squash, brussels sprouts).

In general, avoid seeds that don’t have a well known company behind it – or a face you know.

Some companies DO have good selected packets though, Sow Right Seeds does a great job. While they do put turnips and peppers in the collection, they are good varieties (which again, the variety highly matters) and their seeds are fresh. (If you use SARAHK10 you get 10% off!) I DO use their seeds personally.

Instead, consider spending your time buying seeds you know you’ll grow and actually want to eat.

Make a list of all the produce you enjoy. Research how well it grows in your personal area (for example, kale and lettuce grow well on our island, but sweet corn just struggles overall). Think about how much produce you want to grow – how many people you are growing for, and if you want to preserve food as well (see here for how I broke that all down).

Consider if you want to grow tall with pole peas and beans, or do you instead grow bush versions? Do you want smaller tomatoes that ripen weeks earlier? Or do you want massive slicer tomatoes that can take into September to mature? Dwarf lettuce types ripen faster, but maybe you like huge romaine heads.

Knowing what you want to grow is very important. Then you go source the seeds. If you are new to growing, ask friends/family/local groups on what they like to grow. Do they have a tomato they really like? (Oregon Spring is my go-to for our homestead.) It could save you lots of time.

Don’t forget to grow herbs for flavor, and simple flowers to lure pollinators in to give you larger crops.

If you have children, let them help you pick out things. They are more likely to help grow AND eat if they are involved.

Last But Not Least:

Once you get your seeds, put them in containers to keep fresh. At minimun you want a storage bin, best is glass mason jars. Keeps humidity at bay and insects away. If you live where you have a lot of seeds and you store them in a root cellar, ensure they are in glass or a small metal garbage can, sealed in mylar bags. You don’t want rodent issues.

~Sarah

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Invest January Into Next Year’s Garden

Christmas Day is for me the start of the next year’s gardening season.

And I’ve often thought that for many it is the same.

After everyone goes home, or you make your escape back home….there is something about the desire and pull to become more simple in our lives. To stop and just be for awhile. The frantic build up to the holidays is fraying on the nerves, as is the loud music and the push to “buy, buy buy!” A cup of hot herbal tea, a comfy chair, and a pile of seed catalogs can reverse that feeling.

Time to think on what I want to change in the coming year. What I want to grow. What I want to try.

Btw, Chamomile tea is my choice, with a touch of lemon juice for that Vitamin C we need, and a pinch of Stevia for sweetness.

But I digress, that last week of December slips by. And suddenly it is January. And if it is like it is here, winter is about to make its showtime. This is the prediction for this current week. We have had a mild winter so far, so this is needed. Cold hours are miserable, but make plants grow better come spring.

Make lists. Make charts. Doodle drawings of how you would like things. If you must get items do it now so you can watch prices.

I got a new gift for myself to use in the garden:

A Hori Hori Japanese weeding knife. Amazon had a great sale on them awhile back and I snagged it.

A month back I planted hardy lettuce. It is growing slowly. We are still at around 8.5 hours of daylight so it won’t grow big for another 2 months. But I am testing it to see how it fares through a freeze in the winter, although in the greenhouse.

Our Meyer Lemons are approaching being ripe.

A few more weeks and they will go to an orange color. They ripened into yellow this past week.

With the potential of a freeze cycle, I covered the citrus trees in frost fabric. It can give an extra 10 to 15* degrees protection.

If there is a project for January? It is get your garden ready to go. Work on the inside things first.

For example, most of the shelves in our greenhouse are covered in trays, full of 4″ pots filled with potting soil. While they are seedless, they are ready to go at the end of the month, when it is time to start seeding and into February. This is a boring job to do, so I did it when there wasn’t anything pulling me away. And working in the greenhouse is pleasant when it is cold outside.

So yes, I work outside but I also know…it’s OK to just plan!

~Sarah

Gardening

Why Do Bell Peppers Have Babies Inside?

Here’s a great produce question:

Have you ever cut into a bell pepper, only to find a baby bell pepper inside, often covered in seeds? Or weird stalagmite growths inside that look like they might someday be a pepper?

This is called Internal Proliferation, and is naturally occurring. The little pepper inside the bell pepper is the sign of a ripe, or especially an overripe bell pepper. Its form can vary from irregular, and contorted, to a near-perfect (like how mine appears) but it is sterile fruit. A pepper growing inside a pepper is a type of parthenocarpy, which is the formation of fruits without outside fertilization or the formation of seeds inside it. Now then, you might well see the mini pepper covered in the seeds of the mama pepper. You can pull the seeds off and discard them.

Is the pepper edible? Yes, it is! It should taste the same.

Why does it happen?

You will see this primarily in over ripe produce.

I have been seeing more of them this fall, and my thoughts is they are selling peppers that years ago were sold to food processors instead (like for salsa as an example). I was processing 8 bell peppers today and 3 had mini peppers, a couple more had the start of it. All the peppers were very ripe. Like if I had let them sit another day, the chickens would have had some to eat.

While this doesn’t happen often in home grown bell peppers (because it can take so long to get peppers to grow in the cold PNW), if you live in a hot area, or are using a greenhouse to grow them, you can see it. It is seen far more often in field/greenhouse grown peppers from Mexico (the huge shiny ones sold in the north are grown hydroponically in greenhouses or under grow lights in British Columbia).

This year’s El Nino weather brings many growing issues in Mexico and further south, and the start of the growing season hasn’t been kind to these areas (Peru has seen horrible blueberry crops for weeks already). It does lead to one wondering are they being sold because there simply isn’t enough crop to be picky?

Just thoughts.

But they are perfectly fine to eat. Enjoy it when you see them!

~Sarah

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Sow Right Seeds Black Friday Sale

I have been watching all the good sales coming up this week for us homesteaders – and a sale on seeds is always a good one! I love Sow Right Seeds. They are fairly priced and grow well (yes, I am a customer!)

November 21st to December 2nd Sow Right Seeds is having a sale on:

All Garden Kits & Microgreens Kits are 15% off.

Have you grown microgreens? It’s really easy. And you can do it in a sunny window, even in winter. It’s a great nutritional blast of greens in your diet.

Garden Kits are a fun treat for yourself, but also make a great gift to someone just starting out (and children as well!)

Single Packets Mix & Match 25% off when you purchase 10 packets or more. I always buy early, so I get the best choice in the past few years. The seeds are here for 2024, so start planning and buying!

Seed packets make great stocking stuffers for your fellow gardeners & homesteaders.

Sow Right Seeds is the link, which also gets you 5% off on top of the sales. You can enter the code “SARAHK10” as well for 10% off. Orders over $25 ship free in the US as well!

FTC Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. But a good sale is too good to keep to myself!

~Sarah