Showing posts with label seed starting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seed starting. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Odds and Ends


It's that time of year again! I don't know what is is but I have always loved growing plants indoors. When I was a kid I used to grow flowers from seeds in flats in my bedroom window. I have stepped up my operation since then.




Here are the first brassica's that came up. We have broccoli, cauliflower, walking stick kale, cabbages and brussel sprouts going indoors. 




Here is the first tomato that popped up. They are doing great now I will post pics of the growth soon.




Here is the insulated dog house I am building in the garage. I will have a full post on the construction and design when I finish it. 




Dara was prepping and planting some raised beds on Sunday. She found these giant carrots still going strong. One of them had a soft top and I am sure both were very woody at this point. They went into the compost, but I think if we plant some carrots in the early fall and mulch the bed really good we could pull carrots out through the snow all winter long. 




I started an entrepreneurial experiment recently. I planted 40 Jerusalem Artichokes and 20 Russian Comfrey starts in one quart containers. We plan on making a sign saying something about "Edible Perennial Plants for sale" and trying to sell these from the property on the weekends. We will see where this goes.



Sunday, February 5, 2012

Starting seeds indoors with soil cubes


 This is the Soil Cube Tool, designed and sold by 
Clayton Jacobs. ( www.soilcube.com )  
This is a pretty simple design that is practical and
 easy to use. Basically inside the white squares are 
metal plates attached to the bolts. When you push
 down on the handle the plates compress the soil
 medium into cubes and leave a divot for seed
placement. The springs push the handle
 back to the starting position. 



These are the components of the soil medium. The ratio is:
          3 parts peat moss
       2 parts compost
          1 part garden soil
1 part sand 
  1 part perlite
           Add lime if desired
You can also add fertilizer at this point if you wish. 
I would personally use worm castings and some compost tea. 
You can tweak this mixture for making soil cubes 
but I would stick to the ratios and use medium
 similar to the products in the picture. 



I mixed everything together dry in this large "hose" bucket. 
You can get these at your local box store for $4. I then split 
the mix into three buckets so I could make sure it gets mixed 
consistently. Add just enough water to get a thick oatmeal 
consistency. Once the first 1/3 is mixed add more dry soil 
mixture and repeat. I make a lot of this once a year, saves
 time and it doesn't hurt to have extra.


 Press the tool into the mix and press it against the 
side just filling the inside of the tool with the soil mixture. 
Press down on a hard surface, hold for a second then push 
the handle through the tool and the cubes will fall out. 
It takes a bit of practice to get consistent cubes but if you
 mess up just crumble the bad cube back into the mix.


Here is a close up of the cubes when they are done. 
They hold together very well and readily absorb water. 




Here are the same cubes growing tomatos. 
We have 188 cubes started right now. We are growing
 8 types of tomatos, 7 types of peppers, eggplant,
 celery, leeks, 3 types of onions, broccoli, cauliflower, 
brussel sprouts, green cabbage, red cabbage and kohlrabi. 




Place the cubes in a tub like this, it is very 
easy to move them without handeling them. 
You can pour water in the bottom of the tub which 
the cubes will soak up and wick through the cube. 
Don't let them sit in a pool of water, 
use just enough to saturate the cubes.


This is many varieties of lettuce, spinach, cilantro and amaranth. 
They are growing in trays filled with the grow medium. 
You can grow salad greens all year round without 
them bolting or going bitter in the heat.


Here is the whole set up. The lights are full spectrum
 4 foot fluorescents hanging on chains from a stainless
 steel shelving unit. The lights are on a timer set to come
 on at 5am and go off at 9pm. I have heating pads under
 the peppers and tomatos to help them germinate. I use a 
one gallon hand pump pressure sprayer to mist the cubes 
gently so the seeds are not disturbed.