SEED SOWING INSTRUCTIONS

Similar documents
SEASONAL PLANTING STRATEGY AT A GLANCE

Create Your Spring Planting Schedule

school garden planting guides

BASIC ORGANIC GARDENING Specific Harvests: Cool and Warm Season Crops; Cole; Vine; and Perennial Crops with Introduction to Berries

COMPANION PLANTING FOR EDIBLES

gardening and [ADVANCED ACTIVITY PAGE] W145 Healthy Lifestyle Choices A S Tomatoes Repels flies, hornworms and mosquitos C E S Carrots

Planning Your Vegetable Garden

Some Things to Start Off With

Two Key Principles. Backyard Vegetables. Five Factors to Consider in Selecting a Garden Site. Drip Irrigation

Growing With Your Food: Planting an Edible Garden

CLIENT GUIDELINES Field Sampling for Pesticide Analysis

Fall Vegetable Gardening

Vegetable Gardening. Courtney Keck, M.S. Horticulture Horticulture/4-H Educator Canadian County OSU Extension

YOUR FARM. AT WORK. CORPORATE WELLNESS PROGRAMS

GARDEN MANUAL. Agro-Bio Diversity. October 2015 / Issue 01

Growing Guide. A product of Mountain Valley Seed Co. THE 100% NON-HYBRID, NON GMO LONG TERM STORAGE SEEDS

Best Vegetable Garden Ever. C Compost will improve your soil C Calendar to plan your garden C Consistency in your care

GARDENING PLANNER. ourhappyplace.ca

Growing Transplants. ID-128 Home Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky (pages 8-10)

Charlotte Glen Horticulture Agent, Pender County Cooperative Extension

Starting Transplants & Sowing Seeds. George Bushell

VEGETABLE GARDENING. Debby Newman, Harvey Buchite, Terry Ferris and Bob Velander

ORGANIC PRODUCT CERTIFICATE

CLASS NOTES ON WATERING YOUR VEGETABLE GARDEN

Growing Vegetables Part II. To Direct Seed or to Transplant? Why Use Transplants? 1/18/2012

SUPPLEMENTAL LABELING

Vegetable Gardening 101

Fall Vegetable Gardening

4. Use the Plant Cultivation Chart to look up whether or not the plant variety needs a heating mat to start the seeds, and type of plant hardiness.

Site Requirements. 8 hours full sun. Close to water. Deep, well drained and uncontaminated soil

Extending the Season

Vegetable Gardening 101

Spring Vegetable Gardening. Presented by: Kent Phillips

Adds nutrients to the soil; roots give nitrogen. Attracts parasitic wasps;

Vegetables. There are two different types of vegetable planting:

Vegetables Chapter 10 OSUE MGV Training. Pam Bennett OSUE State MGV Coordinator Horticulture Educator

Growing Vegetables in Containers

Hands On Planting the Fall Vegetable Garden

Juneau Community Garden Association P. O. Box Juneau, Alaska 99803

Department 111 Plants, Flowers, Fruits and Vegetables Premiums: 1 st 1.50, 2 nd $1.25, 3 rd $1.00. Section 1-Cut Vegetables

FY2018 Wayne Metro Community Garden Program APPLICATION Due by 5:00 PM on January 26, 2018

Take into consideration: When to plant. Planning: Seed vs seedlings

Master Gardener Vegetable Specialist Training. Prepared by: Thomas LeRoy

CONTAINER GARDENING, JUNIOR

TRACKS Lesson Plan. Lesson 4: Physical Activity and Planting a Garden Grades 9 12

report on PLANT DISEASE CONTROLLING DISEASES IN THE HOME VEGETABLE GARDEN

DIVISION 773 VEGETABLES, HERBS, FRUITS and EDUCATIONAL EXHIBITS

COLD CROP VEGETABLES

Gardening Basics. If you are lucky to have a big, sunny space for planting, you may only need to add good soil on top of what you already have.

FORESTRY RESOURCES DECEMBER 2016

Home and Market Garden Fertilization

School Garden Best practices

Growing Vegetables In Containers

IN OUR COASTAL CLIMATE

Home of Underwood Gardens

Vegetables Information Leaflet No. 36

4-H HORTICULTURE DIVISION

Transplants Part 2. Acorn Conference Fall 2011

The Gardening Timetable. The Timeline:

SNS 209 TM All Natural Systemic Pesticide. Application & Use Guide

Virginia Cooperative Extension- York County

Vegetable Gardening. A garden of 300 sq ft (15 by 20 ) should provide an adequate supply of your favorite vegetables for a family of four.

How to Grow Leaf Lettuce

Wapanohk Gardens and Edible Schoolyard Guidebook

Texas Home Gardening Guide

HOME GROWN FACTS 121 Second Street, Oriskany, NY (315) or (315) FAX: (315)

Crop%Planning%at%School%Grown%

My 2018 Vegetable Garden Journal Introduction

HOME-GROWN ORGANIC TOMATOES

Organic Pest Management

Turf. Winterize your sprinkling system!

U Paper Towel Gardening

Growing Veggies in Northern Colorado

A Beginner s Guide to Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky Plans and Preparations

4-H Horticulture 4-H FLOWERS & ORNAMENTALS

Charlotte Glen Horticulture Agent NC Cooperative Extension Pender County Center

HORTICULTURE COUNTY CLASSES NOT ELIGIBLE FOR STATE FAIR

Home Harvest USA Total # of Gardens $ Harvest Home Gardens # $ Community Gardens # School Gardens # $ TOTAL # $

Growing Strong. A few caveats: Keep in mind that in Idaho what might have been true in March last year may not be true until May this versa!

Super Soil for Organic Gardening. George Bushell

Vegetable Gardening Sheriden Hansen Horticulture Assistant Professor Davis County Extension Utah State University

Vegetable production guidelines for 12 common aquaponic plants

Starting Seeds for Maplewood Vegetable Gardens

Penticton!Garden!! Club!Bulletin!

BUILDING A SUCCESSFUL SCHOOL-BASED COMMUNITY GARDEN

Can I Grow That Here?

Fall & Winter Veggie workshop, July 12, Instructor: Chris Konieczka, Clackamas Community College. A Harvest For All Seasons

Horticulture. 4-H Project Newsletter

Parts of a Plant Educational Resource Packet

Promoting Oregon Summer squash

COMMUNITY LUNCH & LEARN. Workshop Notes. Container Gardening

Horticulture. Flower Gardening

Building a Raised Bed Vegetable Garden: The Easy Way For South Florida Gardens & Schools

Horticulture DIVISION 770 FLORICULTURE, EDUCATIONAL EXHIBITS & HOUSEPLANTS

With the following directions you can be successful at growing vegetables.

Concise Guide to. Growing. Protected Crops. in Ireland. Klaus Laitenberger

TAKE YOUR GARDEN TO HIGHER LEVEL! Rebecca Krans Michigan State University Extension Consumer Horticulture Educator

How to Grow. Turnips

GrowCamp - U LT I M AT E V E G E TA B L E G R O W E R. Grow your own

Organic Gardening. Plano Community Gardeners Share Their Experience

Transcription:

When to sow seeds 10-12 weeks Mar 6-Mar 26 Celery Eggplant Lavender Leek Onion 8 weeks Mar 27 Apr 2 Alyssum Basil Marjoram Okra Parsley Peppers Tomatoes SEED SOWING INSTRUCTIONS 6 weeks Apr 10 Apr 16 Beets Broccoli Brussels sprouts Cabbage Cauliflower Chives Cilantro Collards Cucumber Dill Fennel Kale Kohlrabi Oregano Pak choi Rutabaga Sage Swiss chard* Tomatoes Thyme Zinnia Zucchini 4 weeks Apr 24-Apr 30 Cantaloupe Cleome Cosmos Lettuce Marigolds Melons Nasturtium Pumpkin Squash Tatsoi Watermelon Zinnia Outdoors Plant directly in garden 4 weeks before last Apr 24-Apr 30 Arugula Asian greens Beets* Carrots* Chard* Dill Mizuna* Mustard* Peas Potatoes* Radish Sorrel Spinach Turnip* 2 weeks May 8-May 14 Muskmelon Sunflower (ornamental) * seeds with a * next to them can be planted indoors before, or outdoors a few weeks later Outdoors Plant directly in garden after last May 21- May26 Beans Carrots* Corn Cowpea Crowder peas Potatoes* Strawberries Sunflowers Sweet Potatoes Sunflowers (for seed)

What to do - First, check which seeds get sown when o Seeds are sown at different times: 8, 6, 4, and 2 weeks before the last expected date of May 21 st. Some seeds will be sown directly in the gardens, either in late April or after the last (beans, corn, and sunflowers, for example). o Check the seed table on the next pages to see which seeds you are going to sow now (8 weeks before ). o Two weeks from now, you ll sow the 6-weeks-before- seeds indoors, and two weeks later, the 4-weeks-before seeds, and so on. Sow the seeds o Pour 6-10 cups of water into the flats and let soil soak up the water from the bottom (soil should be moist on top) o Depending on how deep the seed gets sown, gently poke small depressions in the soil in the center of each cell with a pencil or your finger. o Carefully drop a seed into the depression. For small seeds you may put 1-2 seeds in each depression. Cover with dirt making sure seeds are not buried too deep. o Seeds that are sown very shallow (1/8 ) can just be sown on top of the dirt and pressed in gently. o Cover each flat with Saran wrap. This keeps in the moisture until the seeds sprout. o Remove the Saran wrap as soon as seeds have sprouted! Set up the lighting station: o Place the bricks on top of a couple books about 4 feet apart. o Place the two shoplights on top of the bricks (not the books bricks can t burn) o Place the flats under the lights. Adjust the height of the lights so they are 3-4 inches above the flats (and never let the lights touch the leaves or the Saran wrap!) o As the transplants grow, add more books beneath the bricks so the lights stay 3-4 inches above the leaves. Check the height every time you water. Watering o Soil should never dry out or be crusty on top, nor should it feel wet or soggy. o Water plants about every other day after they ve sprouted. o To water, mix 1-teaspoon fertilizer into 4 cups of water and pour into the bottom of the flat. Pouring water on top of the transplants may make them fall over. Light o Turn the lights on when you get up, and off when you go to bed. Transplants need 14-16 hours of light per day. Don t put the transplants in a sunny windowsill as the sun may dry them out. o Keep transplants away from cold drafts

How to sow seeds SEED Seed depth Large or small cell to sow in? How many days till it should sprout? How many days after sprouting till harvest? Arugula 1/4" outdoors 7-14 21-40 Planting info for week of May 21 st Basil 1/4" S 6-12 65 Plant 1 foot apart Beans 1" S 7-10 55-95 Beets 1/4-1/2 S 5-10 45-60 Broccoli 1/4-1/2 S 3-15 45-85 Brussels sprouts 1/4 S 10-15 85 Can be sown outdoors in April, 4 apart, or indoors in late March. Likes cool temperatures. Sow outdoors after last, 2 apart in two lines. Place a trellis between the lines. Plant 9 transplants per square foot (3 apart). Both the greens and the round root can be eaten raw or cooked. Plant in a sunny spot. Harvest the main head before the flowers turn yellow. The plant will then grow smaller side heads. Leaves can be eaten like collard greens. Start harvesting sprouts as they ripen or wait and harvest entire plant in fall. Leaves can be eaten like collard greens. Cabbage 1/4-1/2" S 4-14 65 Plant 1 foot apart in garden after last Carrots 1/4-1/2" outdoors 14-21 65 Cauliflower 1/4-1/2" S 3-8 70 Chard 1/2" S 10 40-60 Chives 1/4" S 10-20 90 Cilantro 1/4" S 15-20 65 Collards 1/4" S 10-14 65 Corn 1-2" outdoors 4-12 73 Cucumber Plant 16 seeds per square foot. Can sow every few weeks for longer harvest period. Cover developing head with leaves for whitest head. Leaves can be eaten like collard greens. Plant 4 apart in garden after last. Can start picking leaves when fairly small. Do not remove in fall; is perennial. Pick leaves often and remove flower buds. Pick leaves as you need them. Soak seeds in water overnight. in garden 1 week after last, in at least a 2 foot by 2 foot block, 6 apart. Shake tassels gently to pollinate. Harvest when the silks are dried and there are kernels all the way to the top of the ear. 1/2-3/4" S 4-12 60-65 Plant four plants 1 foot apart in two rows on either side of a trellis. Prevent powdery

Dill 1/4" S 7-21 45-55 Eggplant 1/4" L 7-14 65-75 Fennel 1/4" S 7-10 65-100 Kale 1/4" S 3-8 30-60 Kohlrabi 1/4" S 3-15 30-60 Leek 1/8 S 7-21 100 Lettuce 1/8" S 5-10 30-60 Marigold 1/8" S 4-7 - Marjoram 1/8" S 7-10 70 Melons 1/2-1" L 10-20 70-100 Nasturtium 1" outdoors 7-14 55-65 Onion 1/8-1/4" S 4-14 65 Oregano 1/8-1/4" S 7-14 80-90 Pac Choi 1/8" S 3-8 45-60 mildew: water the soil not the leaves, don t let water or soil splash up onto the underside of leaves, and never work in garden when it s wet. Dust leaves lightly with baking soda once a week. Only plant disease-resistant varieties. Pick the leaves for salads, soups, and fish. In fall, save the seeds to grow and for seasoning. Eggplants do not like cold weather. Harvest after fruits reach 4-6. Note: tomato, potato, pepper, and eggplant leaves are toxic. Fennel is very closely related to Dill. Cook like collards or cut finely for salads. Cover with much in fall and it may overwinter. Plant transplants 1 foot apart in garden after last. Excellent greens, and bulb is good sliced and cooked in a light lemon broth. Needs light to germinate. Sow 10-12 weeks before. Plant 4-6 apart. Plant 4 transplants per square foot, or seed directly 2 apart. Leaf lettuces are ready to harvest before head lettuces. Once lettuce bolts (grows flower stalks) the leaves will become bitter. Plant 1 transplant per square foot. Roots exude a chemical that repels nematodes. Plant 1 transplant per 2 square feet. Do not remove in Fall; is perennial. Plant 1 transplant per 4 square feet. Melons can be grown on a trellis or allowed to weave through the other plants in the garden. baking soda once a week. Soak seeds in water overnight. in garden 2 weeks. Onions can be grown from seed or from slips (small plants). Onion seeds should be sown 10-12 weeks. Plant 1 transplant per 2 square feet. Do not remove in fall; is perennial. Pick leaves as needed for pasta sauce, meats, dressings. Plant 1 transplant per square foot. Can be harvested after reaches 6. Do not let it bolt (grow flower stalks) or leaves will be bitter.

Parsley 1/4" S 14-28 75 Pea 2" outdoors 6-14 58 Pepper 1/4" L 8-12 70-78 Potatoes 1-2" outdoors Pumpkin 1/2" L 7-14 80-100 Radish 1/4" outdoors 3-12 25 Rosemary 1/8-1/4" S 21-90 P Sage 1/4" S 15 90 Sorrell 1/8" outdoors Spinach 1/4" S 7-14 42 Squash, summer 1/2-1" L 7-14 50 Squash, winter Plant 1 transplant per square foot. Parsley sometimes overwinters. Plant 8 seeds in a line 2 apart in front of a trellis. Plant 1 transplant per square foot. Peppers can be harvested anytime from the green stage to the red stage. Note: tomato, potato, pepper, and eggplant leaves are toxic. Plant 4 potatoes per 4 square feet. Keep stems from flopping onto other plants by loosely encircling them with twine when large enough. Potatoes are ready to harvest once stems have turned yellow and withered. Do not eat any part of a potato that has turned green; this means it was exposed to light and is toxic. Note: tomato, potato, pepper, and eggplant leaves are toxic. Plant 1 transplant per 4 square feet. Small pumpkins can be trellised or allowed to weave through other plants. Prevent powdery mildew: water the soil not the leaves, don t let water or soil splash up onto the underside of leaves, and never work in garden when it s wet. Dust leaves lightly with baking soda once a week. Only plant disease-resistant varieties. Plant 4 seeds per square foot. Radishes grow very fast and can be sown at any time. They can also be used to keep flea beetles from attacking other cabbage family crops. Cover seeds with newspaper to exclude light until it sprouts. Plant 1 transplant per square foot. Use in sauces, meats, and soups. Transfer to a pot and grow indoors on a cool windowsill once arrives in Fall. Plant 1 transplant per square foot. Pick leaves as needed. Leaves can be dried in Fall for winter use. Sow 4 seeds per square foot. The lemony leaves are great in salads and soups. Sow 4 seeds or plant 4 transplants per square foot. Spinach grows best in Spring and Fall. In Summer, grow New Zealand spinach (not a true spinach) instead. Plant 1 transplant per 6 square feet baking soda once a week. Only plant diseaseresistant varieties 1/2-1" L 7-14 105 Plant 1 transplant per 9 square feet

Sunflower 1/2" outdoors 5-10 110 Thyme 1/8" S 14-21 90 Tomato 1/4" L 7-14 70-100 Turnip 1/8" S 30/50 Watermelon baking soda once a week. Only plant diseaseresistant varieties. Plant seeds 6 apart in row on North or East side of garden so doesn t shade other plants. When heads lean over and seeds begin to mature, cover with paper bag to keep birds away, or cut entire head off with about 1 foot of stem and allow to dry inside a paper bag indoors. Plant 1 transplant per square foot. Do not remove in fall; is perennial. Plant 1 transplant per 2 square feet and grow in a tomato cage. Allow 3-6 leaders to grown, then pinch out suckers (new stems that form between the leaf and stem). Water evenly to prevent blossom drop. Do not plant tomatoes in the same spot next year. Note: tomato, potato, pepper, and eggplant leaves are toxic. Plant 16 transplants per square foot. Pick leaves as needed once they reach 4-6 long, harvest bulb at about 2-3. baking soda once a week. Zinnia 1/2" S 7-10 65 Plant 1 transplant per square foot Zucchini 1/2-1 L 7-14 45-55 baking soda once a week. Only plant diseaseresistant varieties.