Gardening Adventures from The Magic FarmHouse

It’s wet.  The kids would be swimming in the mud if allowed.  Due to the amount of rain, the opportunity to till our garden hasn’t presented itself.  As the rain continues to fall, the rivers and my anxiety level seem to be rising.  It was announced yesterday that the current outlook for planting is around June 1st.  This news caused a little concern about getting some of our seeds into the ground.  Fortunately, our field corn is planted as is our wildlife food plot, strawberry plants, blueberry bush and grape vine.  We also started the tomato and pepper plants indoors 2-3 weeks ago.  Although everything is growing strong, the rest of the garden remains in packets.  At the same time my energetic boys have been quite antsy to be playing outside. I thought we would try a new activity by planting some of the peas which would normally go directly into the ground.  My husband is skeptical about the outcome since planting peas indoors is a bit non-typical.

Since Earth Day was last week I wanted to continue our ‘Green’ celebration.  Re-using some plastic pudding cups, water bottles and an ice cream dish we began our experiment outside on the front porch.  As the drizzle fell we filled each container with some potting soil and following the directions on the seed packet, poked holes about 3/4 of an inch deep.  Taking turns, the boys dropped their seeds and covered each hole.  The final step was watering.  Even though there was plenty falling from the sky, they took turns giving each container a nice drink of water.

All three boys helped fill the containers out of our soil bin.

The little guy is carrying the filled containers back to our planting area.

Making a hole 3/4 of an inch deep for the seeds.

Taking turns, they each place a seed in at least one container.

Finally, the watering...not that Mother Nature couldn't do that for us.

It was a great activity teaching a rainbow of skills such as sharing, teamwork and respecting the environment by re-using the containers.  I’m not sure that it’s lowered my anxiety, but it did get the kids outside and busy.  I look forward to watching the kids care for the plants and learning more about being self-sufficient with healthy foods.  If the experiment works we hope to also attempt planting some pumpkins, sweet snap peas and green beans.  Watch for upcoming posts about our gardening adventures!

Please keep all of those affected by the floods in your thoughts and prayers!

(This post written by Jenny from The Magic FarmHouse.)

Start Your Garden NOW

With the cold weather beginning to hit in many parts of the country, it’s hard to believe that NOW is the time to start planning your garden!  But, truly, it is.   This is the perfect time of year for it.  Here are some helpful ideas:

Start composting. If you are not already doing this, you’ll want to start.  We used an old ice cream pail, set it by the sink,  and dumped in all the scraps from eggshells to coffee grounds, and other odds and ends.  Basically, if you can eat it, you can compost it.  I would leave out fatty meats, though, since they take a long time to decompose.  You can build a compost pile in a small spot in your yard.  Add your bucket each time it fills, and you can put leaves from the yard into it.

Till your soil.  Before the snow, if possible at all.  We add layers of leaves, and we add pinecones to the ground to help aerate it as well.  If you garden mainly in boxes like we do, you can add mulch from the compost, then a layer of leaves, then a layer of pinecones.  Repeat until the boxes are about 2″ higher than the sides.  It’ll mulch down in the snow, and the pinecones will help the melting snow get more moisture to the bottom.

Plot your garden.  Especially if you gardened this year.  You’ll want to move the plants around so you don’t have tomatoes in the same spot as last year.  Each plant takes something different from the soil, so by moving the planting arrangement around, you are helping to give your plants the best start possible.

Start watching for sales. Garden shops are cleaning out their outdoors stuff this time of year for Christmas items (gasp! already?) so this is a great time of year to stock up on tools, seed starters, and even seeds.  Why pay full price next spring?  I personally have never had a problem with “last year’s” seeds sprouting.

With this in mind, you will be giving yourself the best start possible on your garden next Spring!  Happy gardening!

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