Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

3 Weeks Of The AeroGarden Farm 24XL

As I enter the 4th week of our first run of our AeroGarden Farm 24XL it’s interesting watch how fast the plants do grow. Especially if you don’t mess up and cannot figure out why the lights didn’t turn on. I am all for being transparent that sometimes I am clueless.

After we got the machine built, I was very excited. I put in the pods and charted on paper what I was growing. Set up the Wi-Fi, and turned on the machine, full of water and plant food. Day 2 was done, and I posted about the setup.

And by day 3 was asking myself “Why are the lights not coming on?” The water is circulated two times a day. But no lights came on.

I wandered over and started checking everything. The computer system seemed to be working just fine.

And then I realized why.

The cords to the lights were only half pushed in.

As soon as I clicked them in huh…the lights came on blinding bright.

I sure felt pretty stupid at that moment. I looked at everything tech first, not the simplest solution. Kirk gave me some good ribbings over that one….

On January 16th I realized I had another issue:

Mr. Fluff Butt was spending far too much time being interested in the grow tanks, which are just above the ground. The little plastic domes, that sit over the seeds at the start? He would not stop grabbing them. He of course thought it was hilarious to run around the house with them in his mouth.

A few pieces of cheap off brand plastic wrap solved that easily. All it needed was a visual of “hey, you can’t get it easily” and he moved on. Kind of similar to the baby gate on the stairs….

On January 23rd the plants were starting to only sprout, but they were putting on second and third leaves. Overall most eventually germinated, though we had I think 3 of the greens/herbs that didn’t. At 21 days in, you can contact the company about it. Since I messed up the lights I had to go to Day 24. It’s Day 25, so I will contact them tomorrow about it for replacements. But not a big issue, really. Nearly all did germinate and grow as advertised.

February 1st. I was very interested in this run how the tomatoes would do. Unlike the greens, I have noticed the tomatoes grow slower on the outside spots.

February 3rd. In just 2 days time the plants jumped quickly. It’s freaky how they are doing squat and tiny, then suddenly it’s like they doubled over the day.

Even now, I can look over to the unit, by my work desk and the greens are almost ready to harvest for a first salad.

(Photo taken this morning)

The tomatoes soon I will pull up and pot into soil to grow for the greenhouse. If anything, this machine makes starting tomato seeds a snap. I can walk away and let it do the work. However, it is very noticeable that the farthest out plant is the smallest. It is a Yellow Canary Tomato, and it’s siblings are quite bigger. The next row in is bigger, but the row closest to the middle is 3X the size of the outlying Pluto Plant. Hah.

Accessories:

I picked up a Grow Anything Seed Pot Kit (50) on a good price to have on hand, it’s even less by a dollar now. I would prefer to grow my own seeds, especially for tomatoes, that I will plant outside eventually. Amazon is far cheaper for it than on AeroGarden’s website and it’s shipped Prime.

The Power Outage!

Friday night we had a wind storm, and it was going good. We didn’t lose power. But then yesterday morning a tree fell on the power line, just down the street from our place, and took out our power for most of the day. I was nervous, wondering what would happen when we got power back.

No issues at all. Once power was restored I went to the screen on the unit and it asked me had there been a power outage, or was I trying to shut the machine down. I clicked on outage, it had me reset the current time, and off we went. All settings are saved in the computer.

The Roundup:

Yes, it has a slight learning curve. Especially if it is the operator doing the hindering.

But once you figure it out, it’s easy to keep going.

I highly suggest getting a small watering can with a long thin spout for easy fill ups of water (I picked up 3 of these small ones at a Walmart a year or two ago, they are like 2 quart size? In the seasonal garden department). The computer will let you know when it is getting low on water and when to add more plant food. As the plants really grow, you will go through water faster. The spout goes into the water area very easily, and no messes that way.

It’s been fun growing this way, and a great way for the kids to watch it work. It’s going to be a long time till I earn back the money in salads, but again, it lets us grow when outside it is too dark and cold. I feel connected using it.

~Sarah

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Food Security: It Is Everything

Between inflation and supply chain issues that seem to have no end, eating well these past 3 years has become harder. Even if you can afford the food, simply finding what you want has become so much harder. When we look at prices, sigh, and keep moving, that isn’t a good thing. Especially if it is fresh food you are looking at. Passing up produce, fruit and berries and buying starches instead.

I shop at many stores and take photos nearly every trip to show just how expensive food is these days in Western Washington.

Fresh salad kits? Not at this price. Sure, it serves 2. But a year ago these were 3 for $10.

$7.99 for 5 pounds of red potatoes. Potatoes are poverty food. This isn’t poverty pricing anymore. (The potatoes sold by the pound next to it were $2.29 a pound!)

When $5.99 at the discount grocery store is a “sale price” it’s an issue. For strawberries that taste like plastic, and are barely ripe. They will mold fast as well. Buying fresh produce out of season is expensive and it often travels 1000’s of miles to get to you. It isn’t fresh at all.

Yes, eggs are this expensive here. There is NO difference between these eggs and white ones. It is just different breeds.

The real issue in all of this is we are too reliant on the Top 10 multinational food companies and going to grocery stores:

  • Nestle
  • Coco-Cola
  • Unilever
  • General Mills
  • Kellog’s
  • Mars
  • Associated British Foods
  • Danone
  • PepsiCo
  • Mondelez (Formerly Kraft Foods)

Or how this flow chart explains it only too well:

Check out Behind The Brands for more insight.

And when you buy what you think is still a “small company” and don’t remember it was bought out nearly a decade ago – it’s General Mills hiding behind a beloved classic of one’s youth. And is so very expensive.

But their regular lines are nothing more than cesspools of crap ingredients (bioengineered is the term you want to avoid). High in sugar, sodium, artificial coloring and flavorings and preservatives, this isn’t food anymore. It is just calories to shovel in. And the organic/natural lines? They can’t be trusted either. At the end of the day, profit is king. Not how well you might eat.

That being said you can even find things in the stores these days (notice that empty shelf – in this store that hasn’t had stock in 9 months).

I often think worse than none is the semi-rotting produce sold these days in stores. Prior to 2020, this would not have been even been put out! (It is hard to see, but the entire display was was full of yellow and orange, and the smell was awful). It was $5 a pound.

When I shop, it is often a cycle. I go in hopeful. Then I see how few choices I have. Then I see how low quality the produce is now. Then I look at the prices. I cannot justify $8 for a head of cabbage. Or $6 for a head of cauliflower. Or $1.49 a pound for bananas that everywhere I go, they are sickly green and never taste good now.

I come out of the store angry and sad. A weird mix of emotions. I feel like how do I feed my family and not go broke? How do I feed them food that is good for them? A feeling that I have never known in my life. Even as a child and teen raised in poverty – food was still affordable, with what we had. I knew we could still GET food. I watch people shopping and I wonder, how long can they keep this going?

And I often wonder…how do people not see this? How is it they go through their days, and the rising prices become nearly unbearable? Do they just ignore it, willing it to be a bump, before good times come back?

So What Can YOU Do?

  • Start growing food.

It’s what we talk about here quite often. Nearly all of us can grow something. You might not be able to grow acres of food, and be self-sufficient, but every time you don’t have to buy produce, you have beat the system again.

  • Save Seeds.

I cannot express that enough. Save back yearly from your heirloom/open pollinated plants so that you don’t have to buy seeds (or well, at least not as many seeds…hahaha. If you are like me and love finding new plants yearly, we still buy.) If you save back, then in years of lean, you will still be able to plant.

  • Preserve the food you grow.

Be it you create a cellar for garlic, onions and potatoes. Or you dehydrate produce. Or you can. Or you freeze-dry.  When you can “shop” out of your pantry you are winning. You are saving money, gas and time. What you need is in front of you.

  • Build a community of people who have similar goals.

Being a lone wolf is exhausting. You have to do everything. Find people who have similar goals, who are trust worthy. Learn and share with them, to gain new skills. Learn to garden and preserve food with them.

  • Bartering.

Let’s say you grow cucumbers well, but want tomatoes? Find someone in your community who wants to pickle, but is drowning in tomatoes.

  • Supporting Small Companies.

This one connects back to growing actually. You might be thinking food, but even when you buy seeds and plants, buy from companies with an actual face. Use seed companies that grow in your region, and use small farms who grow the seed, versus a company owned by a multinational fertilizer company that has many tentacles. Your seeds will be for where you live, producing better crops, but you also help them earn a living and a shaking fist at “the man”.

But it also applies to food. Buy regionally produced grains instead of supporting General Mills. Buy food that is companies who are truly independent. Look for employee owned. For the small family run, who ignore buyout offers often daily. They need you!

And maybe the most important after growing food?

  • Knowing How To Cook.

It’s winter. You have time. Learn to make basic food to get off the system. Learn to bake bread. How to make jam. Learning to cook means you are less reliant on the system. Less bioengineered ingredients. Eat a lot of soup. Live like you are a peasant who can afford a few nice things such as honey and vegetables, rather than boxes of sugary cereal brought to you by Coke. And when you are gardening, you will have fresh produce to cook with. Learn how to use spinach, tomatoes, bok choy, swiss chard, and so much more.

~Sarah

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

February Garden Task and Seeds To Start

January slips by fast, and once you see February looming, you know it is time to start planning again. Overall, I don’t plant much in January, my push is come February. I start some seeds this month (though I have learned to hold back the majority until March).

We live in grow zone 8b, which much of Island County, Washington is in. We are overall temperate, with wet winters, but not a lot of snow or freezing days (we get frosts, but rarely get deep freezes) with sunny days sprinkled through to dry out. February tends to bring 1 to 3 days of snow, so plan for that before you get too ambitious in planting.

And on the last day of January we got a light dusting:

It reminds me to not push to fast, even though I really want to plant everything!

Garden tasks to get done this month:

  • Figure out what you want to grow in the coming year, and purchase seeds. Now is your chance to get the best (and freshest) selections. This year do not hesitate.
  • Plan your garden layout for the year. Go walk outside, take photos, make sketches, even measure if need be. Work it out on paper, or online, using a program (there are a number of free ones, I prefer paper myself).
  • Clean up your garden work storage space – whether it is a shed, garage or a greenhouse.
  • Sharpen, and clean tools. Things get dirty in storage, and rust can set in. This gives you time to purchase new tools if needed, if something is broke.
  • Clean up tree debris, such as fallen branches and pinecones.
  • Assess fruit and nut trees for minor pruning, if needed.
  • If the ground isn’t frozen, plant bare root trees and shrubs. Bare root items tend to show up in nearly February in nurseries and stores. Buy early, before the items sit in hot stores.
  • Plant asparagus bare roots.
  • If using raised beds for crops, start making them. If existing, turn the soil over and remove weeds. Add more soil if needed.
  • If planning on in ground gardening, consider getting it ready – cover with cardboard to smother weeds, or get garden tarps down. Working in amendments can be tricky this early due to heavy rains in the PNW.
  • If you have ignored your compost bin, work on it. At minimum, start turning it weekly. Add in leaves if you have them. If you have animals, work in their manure and any wood chips.
  • If planning on acquiring chickens, consider ordering your chicks this month, so that by spring they will be old to put outside in their coop. Hens take 9 to 16 weeks to start producing eggs, so plan for this. Chicks should be at least 5 weeks old before being put outside in a coop, I let mine stay in the “chick” coop till they are 10 weeks or so, before they are allowed to go outside in the general population, unless they are hatched by a mama hen, as she will do that for you. During this time, get their coop and run built if you don’t have one already.

Below are seeds you can start in February, which are either colder-weather crops, or need a longer start time, especially crops with a grow times of 80 and up days, in shorter grow time zones. The dates are not set in stone of course. Needless to say, the start of February is a good time to have seeds on hand, potting soil, and small pots ready – and a sunny window, greenhouse or grow light system on hand. And if you start them later? It’s OK for many crops. And for temperamental ones like broccoli, you always can grow those as a fall crop, where they often fare better than in spring, if you miss the window, or late winter is too warm and they bolt to seed. It’s hard though to ignore the call to start growing seeds.

I don’t plant outside this time of year due to the seasonal rains. The seeds just don’t do well. The soil is often waterlogged this month, and can/will still have overnight freezes. For seeds and delicate plants, this is often too much for them.

  • Artichokes
  • Asparagus, from seed
  • Beets
  • Broccoli
  • Brussel Sprouts
  • Cauliflower
  • Celery
  • Chard
  • Collards
  • Herbs
  • Kale
  • Kohlrabi
  • Leeks
  • Lettuce
  • Onions, from seed (Sweet onions take so long to grow, early start times can actually matter)
  • Peas
  • Peppers (They can wait until March)
  • Radishes
  • Rhubarb, from seed
  • Spinach
  • Strawberry, Alpine (Can take 14 weeks to just germinate)
  • Tomatoes (I find you can wait until March and they catch up with no issues)

~Sarah

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Growing Potatoes: The Easiest Vegetable To Grow

This meme always makes me laugh. Because it is so true. Every garden group I am in for self sufficiency always ends up on the topic of potatoes.

And why?

Because potatoes are so easy to grow. They are possibly the easiest vegetable to grow. Potatoes have in their code the drive to reproduce. They are not finicky like an artichoke that probably won’t even flower at all, much less produce food. They are not like corn, that will take a lot of resources (space, water and food) to produce 2 ears of corn and then die off. Nothing touches them outside of a few insects.

No, they will grow sitting in your pantry, putting out eyes that look alien and freaky. They literally have the code in them to grow if they go bad. They will grow in compost piles, and 1 bad one will produce 10 or more potatoes for you to harvest when you notice what is happening – that what you think is a tomato plant shooting up isn’t. And if you take the same potatoes and put them in the ground, they will produce forever. For they will make baby potatoes you don’t see when digging up, and those continue to grow. And repeat forever.

You don’t have to do anything honestly, after planting. It’ll take care of itself. If you have chickens, you will find potatoes halfway across your property growing, where they moved it on accident. I find them everywhere. Sometimes the boys have fun taking rotten potatoes and using them as baseballs…and I find plants growing randomly on the edge of the forest.

One Bonus:

Potatoes are in the Nightshade family (Solanaceae). Most animals won’t touch potato tops. I’ve found that rabbits, deer and chickens won’t touch the tops. This means you can plant them outside of fencing.

For example, this group starting to send up tops? Nothing touches it, even though it is right in the open. Chickens will try to scratch in it at first, due to it having worms (it was an old worm bin), so I put a piece of metal fencing around the top for a few weeks, but once it is filled in, they stay out of it. And it says a lot, as our chickens love eating rhubarb leaves. There isn’t anything good about potato leaves, as they contain glycoalkaloids, which solanine is the issue. Animals seem smart enough to leave it be. Always teach children to not eat leaves of plants unless they ask first. There are people who hate on the Nightshade family, some people are far more sensitive to eating potatoes, tomatoes, peppers and eggplant and it can lead to inflammation. I can eat them, but I wear gloves when handling leaves (my skin reacts especially to tomato leaves, and my skin gets very itchy and inflamed if working in the sun in tomatoes, and so with potatoes, I always wear gloves and long sleeve shirts because of my history.)

Just harvested new potatoes.

How To Grow Potatoes (Easily):

Buy your potatoes.

While not the cheapest way, buying sterile seed potatoes (they are potatoes, not actual seed in general) will ensure you having healthy plants for a number of generations. I buy from Irish Eyes Seeds in Eastern Washington State. The big box stores will carry shiny boxes of potatoes – usually white, yukon gold, red and blue, but those boxes are over priced and the potatoes are often soft and rotting. If you do buy that way, be sure to peek in the box and run the price in your mind for per pound. You may well find buying online is better. Do not buy them if they are displayed inside the store, or in the direct sun outside. (Again, peek inside. If it is all humid in the bag, pass on it.)

The other method is using grocery store potatoes. Which, yes, does work just fine overall. However, you do run (a very small) risk of potato diseases. I don’t worry about that too much to be honest. But there is a catch, overall you will want to buy organic potatoes. Standard potatoes are treated with chlorpropham, that inhibits sprouting. You can tell which ones are treated, as they will sit on a counter in light and never produce eyes growing, yet will turn a sick shade of neon green eventually. Toss those in the compost pile. They will eventually grow or rot, but don’t waste your time! Organic ones (in theory) should not be sprayed. I tend to plant store ones in buckets and pots, to keep them separate from the rest of the growing area. Far cheaper as well, you can often get a pound for $2 to 3 this way – and that’s a lot. I have found that Washington State grown Russet potatoes are not sprayed, as they put out eyes seemingly instantly. 5 pounds for $5 is pretty hard to say no to…..

The other option is to grow Clancy Potatoes, which are actually grown from seed. I have grown them for 3 years and they are so much fun. First you grow the seeds (great for a greenhouse in late winter), then into a pot or the ground. They are delcious potatoes. (They can also be grown from potatoes held back, after growing the first year.)

Figure our your last frost date for your grow zone and your microclimate.

This can vary wildly even in a single zip code. For example, where we live on Whidbey Island it can be March 15th to April 15th, depending on the micro pocket you are in. You want to plan your first crop to be ready to plant about 2 weeks before the last frost date. For our place, I’d plant around mid March.

Why grow early?

Potatoes like cool to warm temperatures. They don’t like hot weather, especially if they are in pots above the ground. Also, more importantly, if you grow early, you can get 3 to 4 separate crops per year of potatoes cycling through.

Get your potatoes ready.

If your potatoes are hanging out in the dark, that you want to plant, bring them out into the light. If small, you can leave them whole. If large, cut chunks around each eye. Place these in a sunny window, or in your greenhouse on a shelf. This will activate them to start growing, and the eyes will get growing. You want to do this a week before you plant. The pieces need sun to activate, to say to them it is time to get growing.

Get your grow area ready:

There are many ways. But one key note is when putting the potatoes in the ground, be sure to face the eyes up. Just like garlic, you want it to have the easiest time to grow the right way.

The most easy is old 5 gallon buckets, with holes drilled into the bottom for drainage. Toss a piece or two in the bottom, fill with light soil/compost blend. Water often and otherwise ignore

Or use old plastic swimming pools, or cloth grow bags. Even old garbage cans. Or raised beds.

In ground, dig a trench and walk along dropping pieces in, then cover.

Watering:

Keep potatoes watered as you would most things in your garden, but if in pots, keep a far closer eye on it, so they don’t dry out. You want well watered, but not soggy. I tend to keep the 5 gallon buckets all together, where they sit under the irrigation wobblers, so they are watered daily (I put them on the edge of a row, in the fenced in beds.

Mound Up:

Over time you will want to add more soil or mulch (or both) as the plants surge up. Each time the stems are another 6″ high, add more around the plants.

Once the plants go to putting on flowers, stop mulching.

Harvesting and Storing:

If you are growing in pots or bags (or garbage cans), harvest will be a one time event. Dump out and pick through, I do this in a cart, so I can reuse the soil.

If you grow using mulching, you can harvest early potatoes, from the top, and then later on, get the big potatoes, digging up.

After harvesting, I gently brush off as much dirt as I can, then I lay the potatoes on a screen we built, of hardware cloth, framed with spare wood. A good rinse gets the dirt off. Then I air dry in the shade (not in the sun!).

Once dry, they either go into the cellar where it is dark and 55* year round, or into paper bags in the pantry to be used up soon.

Light is your enemy with potatoes, so keep them out of it, especially the sun.

Don’t store in plastic bags or tubs, unless they are designed for produce and are nothing but ventilation. All it takes is one sweaty potato to send the whole group into growth cycle and you will have planting potatoes, not eating potatoes.

Replanting:

Hold back 20% of your harvested crop. Look for the really ugly ones. Maybe you cut one on accident while digging. Leave those in a sunny area to activate, and then plant right away.

Do this, and in many areas you can grow 3 to 4 separate runs every year.

Ready for market.

~Sarah

Gardening · Homesteading

First Look: AeroGarden Farm 24XL

I was gifted an AeroGarden Farm 24XL this winter, the largest hydroponic system that AeroGarden produces. (Hydropondic is where the plant is grown in water, rather than in soil.)

Kirk got it on a fantastic deal for half the retail price for Black Friday. It’s not cheap though. But it also has the features for the price. This isn’t small by any means, it’s no table top device. So if you have seen the small AeroGarden setups, this is far different. It can grow taller items, such as dwarf tomatoes and green peas as well, that the smaller units just cannot.

What led me to wanting to try out hydroponics was last years growing. With the skies darkened due to (what I consider the issue) ash from Tonga, we struggled all year. This fall/winter I have been trying different methods outside to grow year round. From our greenhouse to raised beds (this bed is wrapped with plastic sheeting, around its fence, but has an open top). While the romaine lettuce has kept growing, even through 2 snowfalls and a week long minus freezing event, the lettuce is small. Till spring comes, this lettuce won’t be good eating to be honest. It keeps alive, but is tough as can be. Good for it, but not good for us…..ha.

I realized I needed to explore growing systems again. Overall I don’t use grow lights on our homestead, but with lettuce prices and even finding lettuce in the stores this winter, something had to give. And after this last year of having so many fails, I will embrace it.

 

It is:

  • 46″ high (nearly 4 feet high!)
  • 36″ across (3 feet)
  • 14″ deep (this makes it easy to have it on a wall)

Features:

2 separate 12 pod grow tanks (each 12 pod is separately controlled)

2 60 watt LED grow lights

Runs on a computer on the unit

Has an app to control remotely

Automatic lights

Built in reminders to add water and feed

Has a magnetic trellis system for taller items

Has a kit you can buy that can stack the systems to create a wall of growing (if I had unlimited money I would be all over this…..)

You can use the machine to start seeds and then transplant them into soil (for tomatoes for example) if you desire.

The Building of The System:

When the unit showed up, Kirk had to hide it for a few weeks – and that wasn’t easy as the box was big enough for a kid to get into. But he did it….

I won’t lie….I did get on the struggle bus a bit with assembling the unit. For one, sitting on the floor doing the assembly sucks. It helped having a kid to help me hold up the sides when screwing them together.

Some of the screws were just awful to get in, using a tiny Allen wrench. This screw was in the storage compartment at the top. And worse, I had put the wrong arm there, and had to remove it, and do it over. My knuckles hated me. My hands are not big overall, and I was cramped. I am not sure Kirk’s hands would have fit in there.

I highly suggest using cardboard under it while building. And have good lighting so you don’t swap the left and right sides. Or better, build the stupid thing on your dining room table so it is at eye height, which is what I ended up doing, so I didn’t have to sit on a hard floor anymore. It went a lot faster that way. And I could see the markers on the parts a lot better.

Overall, it wasn’t that bad to put together, just a few frustrations. One of those “once you build one, you are a pro at it” things.

Then it was on to setting up the water tanks and cords down below and getting the unit into position.

After that, we set it up to a secured entry onto our wifi and set up the system. I put the app on my phone and it would work even better on a tablet I feel (bigger the better), so I will add it to my tablet I use here and there.

Each side takes 2 gallons water to get it started. The computer screen lets you know when you have added enough water.

Each side is separately controlled, and you can toggle back and forth.

I added in the required feed per side (4 capfuls).

Then I opened up the 2 boxes included of pre-loaded seed pods. Each box is 12. One was a salad bar of lettuce and herbs, the other was 2 types of cherry tomatoes. The pods are marked on top.

I wrote down what I planted on paper (because I know in a short matter of time, I won’t be able to read the labels, once the plant grows). Also read the boxes the pods come in, on the side is a breakdown of the actual names of the seeds and germination rates, when they tested the seed lot.

We are Day 2 into the cycle, so I will update in a few weeks how it goes.

Let us hope it looks like this soon enough 😉

The company does guarantee germination, and if it doesn’t happen after 21 days, to contact them. We shall see what happens. I am not terribly concerned though. I plan on using the machine instead for growing my seeds, that I have hand picked for what we like to eat.

They sell the parts as well for this (of course). I did find buying through Amazon was considerably cheaper. I picked up the 50 count kit, which includes the plastic baskets, the peat moss cones, plastic domes, labels and 6 bottles of liquid feed. I paid with tax $30 for this. On the AeroGarden website it was out of stock, but retailed for nearly $60. The 6 bottles of liquid feed are nearly $60 on their website! So the Amazon set is a bargain, and is directly sold by Amazon, not a 3rd party.

~Sarah