• giveaway ENDS SOON! Cutest Baby Fowl Photo Contest: Win a Brinsea Maxi 24 EX Connect CLICK HERE!

Green thumb is itching, anyone else?

I woke up at 4:00 am this morning thinking about the last two fruit trees that I need to get pruned. One is a flowering plum and the buds are beginning to swell. The Santa Rosa plum is the other. I'd like to get more plums from this to make plum jam.

Yesterday we went to a parking lot sale at the Cambria Pine Nursery. Needless to say, my husband, the chief hole digger, has his work cut out for him this week.

As far as zucchini, in this little coastal town of California, the leaves of our zucchini gets powdery mildew each summer because of the warm, moist, climate. I just remove the leaves when they start dying down. Interestingly, the plant still produces and I always have "more than enough" of the vegetable to eat grilled, pickled, or steamed.
 
I'm getting overly excited to plant seeds...I work at a restaurant and have been bringing home some of the cardboard egg flats..the ones that have like 3 dozen eggs on one thing. I just wanted a little bit of extra growing space in case I decide I need it. Which I will. I'm going to have to buy more lights.

What is everyone's experience growing in egg cartons..is it going to be a waste of seeds? I was thinking of planting marigolds in them because my marigolds were so easy to grow last year and I want extra this year, but then I got to thinking that maybe the little cups would be too shallow for some plants.
Any suggestions on easy to grow flowers? I'm going to focus on veggies for my family members, but I want to grow myself a couple flowers and was hoping for something as simple and quick growing as marigolds.
 
I had a bunch of plastic inserts from parfaits from my job (about 1/2 inch deep, 3 inches wide), they seem to work ok for now... I always plant way too many seeds anyway and have to thin within weeks *laugh*
 
Queenchick, we don't. It's very dry here...we're classed as "high desert" so it's generally a lack of humidity that is an issue for us. You can leave a bag of potato chips open for weeks while you eat on it...and they never go stale or soggy.
 
Queenchick, we don't.  It's very dry here...we're classed as "high desert" so it's generally a lack of humidity that is an issue for us.  You can leave a bag of potato chips open for weeks while you eat on it...and they never go stale or soggy.
Thats 2 reasons to move to northern Colorado . Zucchini and the fact tat my husband and son never recluse the chip bag.
 
Wow I'd love that! Around here, you leave a bag of chips open for 10 minutes and they're soggy! I do like soft cookies though so those go unclosed on purpose :lol:

Seriously though, to dry bread for bread crumbs I leave them out to dry a day or two and THEN have to put them in a warm oven to really dry.
 
I hear ya on that...I spent most of my life in the midwest where the humidity generally runs 70 to 90 percent...ugh! I'ts a humid day here if it hits 40% :) Both have their advantages...winter here can be hard on the skin and fingernails and we have to use humidifiers. But on the other hand, it's easier on the puffiness and arthritis. When I first moved here I had issues with nosebleeds quite frequently, but that finally passed. For me the few negatives are far outweighed by the positives. When I go back east to visit, my hands and feet and eyes swell up and sometimes I feel like I'm trying to breathe under water.

We've been tossing around the idea of moving to a place where land prices are more reasonable and we could get a little acreage to have our wee "farm", and one of the main criteria is that humidity thing, LOL

I see you're in Houston. I have a cousin who lives in Dallas who came for a visit a few summers ago. It was about 85 degrees and he was astonished...he kept saying "Is it really 85??" With the low humidity it felt more like about 70 to him.
 
I know exactly what you mean! I visited my daughter in Oregon during the summer and it was 90 - yet I wore long sleeves and didn't break a sweat. She kept telling me how hot I'd be. I was fine! It felt great!
 
I'm from Holland. Just imagine me getting off a plane in Atlanta for the first time. WOAH. I felt like I walked into a wall, when I walked out the airport. Never had experienced humidity like that!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom