Planning Your Vegetable Garden: Seed Starting Schedule
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Growing a vegetable garden from seed this year? Stay organized by developing a seed-starting schedule. A seed starting schedule provides a guideline of when to sow seeds and when to transplant seedlings to your vegetable garden. Learn how to create a planting schedule with these tips.
Starting transplants from seeds indoors can be very enjoyable for a gardener, especially after a long winter. I love watching life emerge from the tiny seeds and flourish into healthy seedlings. Starting transplants from seed is also less expensive per plant and offers a greater variety than buying nursery plants.
Hopefully, by now you have an idea what you want to grow in your vegetable garden, ordered and organized your seeds, and mapped out your garden beds so you know where everything will be planted and how many plants you will need to fill the space. If not, go ahead and review these articles:
How to Choose Crops to Grow Easy Garden Seed Organization and Storage How to Map the Vegetable Garden Now the challenge is to figure out when to sow seeds
If you start some seeds indoors too soon, you will end up with lanky plants under the lights. Sow seeds too late and the plants will be weak when transplanted to the garden, or may not have enough time to mature and produce a harvest before your fall frost.
To help get the timing right and keep you organized, it is a good idea to make a seed starting and planting schedule. A planting schedule is used to record the dates to sow seeds indoors under lights, when to
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Most likely native to Southeast Asia, colocasia (Colocasia esculenta, Zones 7b–12) is used by many gardeners for its large, tropical-looking foliage. This plant also has a long history of being used in cooking. Visitors to Hawaii are often treated to poi, a starchy Polynesian edible food paste made from its rootlike corm. Common names of colocasias include taro, eddo, dasheen, and elephant’s ear. Elephant’s ear is the most commonly used common name, but that can be confusing because plants called elephant’s ear come from several different genera, including Colocasia, Alocasia, and Xanthosoma, all of which are members of the arum family (Araceae). While there are several different species of colocasia, cultivars and hybrids of Colocasia esculenta are the main ones you will find being sold in garden centers to home gardeners.
Planting and maintaining a thriving garden isn’t all knowledge and natural instincts—there can be an element of luck, too. Sometimes, what affects your plants’ success is totally out of your control, such as rainfall, wind, and other weather events. That’s just a byproduct of working with nature.
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Instead of watching your summer crops strugg
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Taking the effort to clean up the vegetable garde
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. When planning your vegetable garden, it is so easy
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Organic mulch is any type of natural materia
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Crop rotation is a great way to maintain health
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Mapping your vegetable garden before planting helps
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Successful vegetable gardens begin with goo
This post may contain affiliate links, which means that I may receive a commission if you make a purchase using these links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. If you are looking to grow a lush and fru
It is always best to grow some veggies in your container garden instead of depending on the supplements that we buy from the counter to give a boost to our immune system. Follow our guide to know everything about How to Grow a Vitamin C Vegetable Garden in Containers.
There can be real discordance in the vegetable garden. Placing plants side-to-side that vie with one another, for example, does not do much good for any of them. But there is wonderful community that can happen between plants as well – and it's a great way to strategize when plotting out a garden plot.