What did you do in the garden today?

:caf I am thinking I need a better way to organize and store my seeds. Right now I just have them in a small 4X6 inch cardboard box...

View attachment 3622170

View attachment 3622171

All my current seeds fit in that little box. However, I am starting to save seeds from plants we are growing. So, I can imagine needing more room for the seeds. Also, I have been reading and watching that it would be better to keep them dark and airtight if possible. Another consideration is making the seed box mouse proof. Last year Dear Wife saved some seeds, left them on a plate to dry out, and one night a mouse must have found them and ate them all. She was devastated. So any storage system will have to be mouse proof as well.

I looked on Amazon and their "Seed Boxes" are pretty darned expensive. I mean, some of them are nothing more than a metal can with "Seeds" painted on it...

View attachment 3622173

Well, heck, I know that Harbor Freight has waterproof and airtight ammo boxes on sale all the time. I found this 11.6 X 4.25 X 6 inch ammo box on sale this month for $3.99...

View attachment 3622175

View attachment 3622174

That's the smallest ammo box they have at the store. They have larger sizes, too. But this small ammo box would be double what I currently have for storage.

My goal is to stop buying new seeds every year. If possible, I will save seeds from our plants when we can, but I would also like to buy seed packs at the end of the season at great discounts and save them for the next year.

I also checked YouTube to see if anyone was using these water resistant ammo boxes for seed storage and found this video short...


The small ammo box (with twice the capacity I am using right now) looks like it might be good enough for my current and immediate future needs. Any thoughts or suggestions appreciated. I am open to all suggestions. Thanks.
I’m not sure the plastic used in ammo boxes is safe for storing food ( related) stuff?! I l know Metall usually doesn’t give off anything but most plastics exsude unhealthy fumes ..
 
I used to grow cucumbers with no trouble. Not anymore. Cucumber Beatles spread bacterial wilt and Downy mildew is a problem. Now it is more work to control these things that were never a problem. Cucumber Beatles and corn rootworms one and the same. Bt gene was added to corn to control them and corn ear worms. I wonder if BT for the lawn would help in the garden. More Beatles can fly in but surely reducing numbers should help.
 
I’m not sure the plastic used in ammo boxes is safe for storing food ( related) stuff?! I l know Metall usually doesn’t give off anything but most plastics exsude unhealthy fumes ..

:confused: I had not considered that. The plastic ammo box I got smells like plastic, not ammo, but metal ammo boxes have a smell to them as well. I had not considered that the plastic smell would affect the seeds themselves. I mean, some gardeners with serious storage systems use plastic container cases with individual plastic boxes. I don't know if that plastic smells any different that the plastic used in the ammo box I bought.

When I was looking online for seed storage suggestions, I found a number of people with small amounts of seeds like I have, are using these small ammo boxes for storage. Nobody ever mentioned your concern. So, I had not even considered it.

But, if all those people using plastic ammo cans for a number of years don't report any problems, I am thinking it is probably OK for seed storage.
 
That's sunscald that weakens the top and then a fungus sets in.
What about draping a white sheet over the affected plants? I don't have a way of suspending any kind of cover over the plants, but maybe a lightweight sheet would help?

Trying to think ahead for next year. Too late for this season's crop. Good thing I planted so many plants...
 
Trying to think ahead for next year. Too late for this season's crop. Good thing I planted so many plants...

:fl I consider myself more of a lucky gardener than a smart gardener. I start more plants than I expect to need, more varieties of the same kind of plants (like tomatoes), and different types of veggies in the hopes that some of them will be successful, some will be just OK, and, of course, it might be another bad year for certain crops. I celebrate the successes and try to learn from the failures.

:confused: I never seem to get over the learning curve with gardening.

:yesss::clapHaving said that, this was a really good year for us, and we are very happy with our raised bed gardens. We even successfully grew some tropical veggies in northern Minnesota, zone 3b, which was a nice surprise.

:tongue The only thing I don't like about gardening is that you don't get a "do over" until next year. When I make a mistake, I would like to correct it right now. It takes a lot of patience to wait another year to put your changes in place.
 
The only thing I don't like about gardening is that you don't get a "do over" until next year. When I make a mistake, I would like to correct it right now. It takes a lot of patience to wait another year to put your changes in place.
And if you save your own seed, you find out the next year if it's any good. If not...

So next year, I'll plant some of my saved tomato seed and try some new varieties. I'm sticking with Hungarian Heart, Amish Paste, Ace 55, and Italian Heirloom (all my saved seeds). Skipping Cherokee Purple and Mortgage Lifter.

I liked Russian Big Roma. I think I'll order that again (and save some seed) and try the German Johnson. And some cherry tomatoes too. Maybe Super Sauce too.
 
OK, if you know, you know.....
Today's treasure at my little village thrift shop. $1.50
and entire drawer of someone's grandma's handwritten recipes. Some go back to 1920s.
I AM drooling going through these.... some interesting ones in there that might be of interest here
Strawberry Pine apple jam
Lime Daq pie
And tomato preserves
Lots of zuke recipes
JUST wow... most modern thing I've seen is 1984

Breaks my heart to know someone just threw this at the thrift shop. Glad I snagged it.
View attachment 3622956
Wow, that’s a treasure!
 
:fl I consider myself more of a lucky gardener than a smart gardener. I start more plants than I expect to need, more varieties of the same kind of plants (like tomatoes), and different types of veggies in the hopes that some of them will be successful, some will be just OK, and, of course, it might be another bad year for certain crops. I celebrate the successes and try to learn from the failures.

:confused: I never seem to get over the learning curve with gardening.

:yesss::clapHaving said that, this was a really good year for us, and we are very happy with our raised bed gardens. We even successfully grew some tropical veggies in northern Minnesota, zone 3b, which was a nice surprise.

:tongue The only thing I don't like about gardening is that you don't get a "do over" until next year. When I make a mistake, I would like to correct it right now. It takes a lot of patience to wait another year to put your changes in place.
It’s not you, Mother Nature loves to throw curveballs. All you can do is your best, and some years it sucks.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom