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Saturday, May 27, 2017

Putting in the garden

I can’t remember the first time I heard the expression, “putting in the garden,” but it was a very long time ago. “I’m going to put in the garden this weekend.” “It’s almost time to put in the garden.” Once I got some experience as a gardener, that expression seemed weird. Yeah, I would, “put in a garden,” but that usually consisted of building another bed, cultivating a new area, or some similar activity that would significantly increase how much watering and weeding I had to do (Note to self: what seems like a great idea in March is usually a pain in the posterior by August).

What people usually meant by, “putting in the garden,” was, “planting the vegetable garden.” The entire thing. Usually in a weekend. Once I moved from Portland to Southern California, I stopped hearing this expression, since gardening is truly a year-round activity in SoCal (except when the outdoor temperature is approximately 1582 degrees, and you will spontaneously combust if you open your front door--but even then one gardens in the evening, once the porch cools off enough to not melt one’s flip-flops to the soles of one’s feet). But now that I live on Hoth in Flagstaff, I once again hear people talk about, “putting in the garden.” And now I understand why. I planted a bunch of stuff in March (first warm spell = delusional gardener), only to watch it freeze/rot/get buried in snow. I planted some more stuff a couple of weeks ago. Some of it froze. My poor potatoes--planted during the aforementioned March warm spell--have frozen twice. Yet they are sprouting once again, brave little tubers that they are. And believe it or not, we haven’t quite reached our average last frost date, which is June 15. I really need a giant hoop house to cover my entire yard.

Based on what everyone tells me, Memorial Day weekend is the official time in Flagstaff to, “put in the garden,” so that’s what I’ve been doing. Last year we started building a potager (note to self: what seems like a good idea in October will probably seem absurd the following summer, when the grasshoppers are eating everything and I’m watering 219 times a day). It’s not finished yet (obvious from the pic at the beginning of this post), and it doesn’t look like much, because it’s mostly filled with newly-planted seeds and newly-transplanted seedlings.

Photo 1: The bed on the left is seeded with winter squash, bush beans, sunflowers, and nasturtiums. The bed on the right contains peas (they’re the tiny green things at the base of the metal yard art covering the ugly satellite dish pole in the corner) and fennel transplants plus sunflowers, zucchini, and marigolds. The half-built bed along the chain-link fence has two hills of winter squash. Why wait for a bed to be finished to plant in it?

Photo 2: The bed on the left has purple cabbage, cilantro, and a lone fennel plant that wintered over, plus seeds for radishes, beets, more cilantro, and basil. The righthand bed contains my poor frost-nipped potatoes, seeds for bush beans and zinnias, and a lone calendula seedling, the only one of my winter-sown calendulas to survive the first grasshopper invasion of the year. The bed by the fence contains lettuce, chard, a currant bush, onions, blackberries, a boysenberry, and seeds for zinnias, cucumbers, milkweed, and basil. Oh, and I think I threw in some garlic too.

The delusion image in my mind is much prettier than the reality shown above. Imagine those beds overflowing with grasshoppers beans, squash, strawberries, raspberries, potatoes, parsley, dill, basil, marigolds, sunflowers, chard, lettuce, parsnips, onions, garlic, blackberries, zinnias, and calendula. Hopefully some of that will actually happen, and I can post pictures here so there is evidence that it’s actually possible to grow stuff in this bizarre land of late frosts, grasshoppers, howling wind, grasshoppers, lousy soil, and grasshoppers. In the meantime, I will bask in the warm glow of sunburn accomplishment and enjoy my fantasies.

Does anyone have a flamethrower I can borrow? I think I hear grasshoppers...

Sunday, May 14, 2017

Cheapskate gardening 1: Propagating plants

Photo from Flickr user mannewaar. Creative Commons licensed.
For much of my gardening life, I’ve had a large yard and a small budget. Sound familiar? Yeah, I thought it might--especially the small budget part. That seems to be an issue for a lot of us. Food gardening in particular tends to get more popular during hard economic times, but you won’t save money if it costs more to garden than to forage at the local grocery store. So let’s talk about how to garden less-expensively. This post will be the first of several, written on no particular schedule, that talk about how to be a frugal gardener. Since spring is in full swing, let’s start with how to save money on plants.

Plants are expensive. Every time I go to my local nursery, I wish I were in the nursery business. I’m pretty sure they must use gold-plated potting soil or something. (OK, nursery people, put down the garden forks. I know it costs lots of labor to produce a beautiful plant and grow it to market size. Really I do. But nursery prices still strain my budget.) So, let’s look at some ways to avoid paying top dollar for the plants you want. This first post will cover plant propagation. The next one will cover other ways to get cheap--or even free--plants.


If you’re willing to do some of the work that nurseries do, you can save lots of money. Go to your local library or flex your Google muscles to learn about plant propagation techniques. Most are not difficult; they just take a little time and know-how. I’ve listed a few techniques and links to articles to get you started, but dig deeper (garden pun alert!) to learn more.


Start them from seed. I’m planning another post on how to grow from seed frugally, so stay tuned for that one. For now, I’ll say that even if you pay full price for seeds at the most expensive nursery in town, starting seeds is going to be cheaper than buying plants.


Take cuttings. You don’t need a degree in botany to grow plants from cuttings. Let’s look at some options:
You can also start plants from offsets--mini-plants that grow from the original, like those cute mini-spider plants that dangle from the mother plant. Just pinch it off and stick it in wet dirt, and soon you’ll have a new plant. True story: The only thing I ever deliberately stole from a store was an offset from a spider plant. I was probably about 10 or so and had fallen in love with houseplants (gardeners, like serial killers, often show signs of their pathology at an early age). I had very little money, but I would stroll through the houseplant aisle at the local Value Giant and look longingly at the pretty green wares. One day temptation got the best of me, and I pinched off a tiny offset from one of the big, beautiful spider plants, took it home, and planted it. It grew, and I had the plant for years, though I’ll admit to feeling a twinge of guilt whenever I looked at it.


Try layering. Layering is similar to taking stem cuttings, but the piece to be rooted remains attached to the parent plant while it’s rooting. See articles from Gardening Know How and NC State Extension for clear, detailed instructions. GrowVeg has a great post on propagating herbs and other edibles via layering.


Propagate by division. Division is the easiest propagation method I’ve ever tried. It works with plants that form clumps, bulbs, suckers, tubers, or rhizomes (so basically perennials that have more than a single stem, because you have to have something to divide).  It consists of 3 basic steps:
  1. Dig up the plant.
  2. Cut it into pieces.
  3. Replant the pieces.
OK, so there’s a little more to it, like knowing what time of year works best for a specific plant and the best days to do it (hint: not when it’s 112F in the shade). Bay Gardens has a list of plants that can be propagated by division with recommended times of year. Seasonal Gardening offers more detailed instructions for those of you who liked to do all the optional reading in school.


Propagate stuff you get from the supermarket. When I was a kid (Oh, no! There she goes with another story about back in the day…), my mom seemed to always have an avocado pit suspended from toothpicks in a plastic cup filled with water. And it was always on the kitchen windowsill. It looked just like this, except after about 2 weeks it was coated with green algae.


Photo from Wikimedia Commons. Creative Commons licensed.


I don’t ever remember any of those pits actually germinating, but they were there, by golly. I’m pretty sure there was a law in California in the 1970s that said you had to have an avocado pit in your kitchen window.


Turns out there are lots of things you can grow from grocery store produce (besides algae avocados)--so many that people have written entire articles and even books on the topic. See this article from the Missouri Botanical Garden for a good starting point. A few words of advice from my own experience:
  • You’ll find lots of information warning you about what not to do. Don’t propagate [thing] because it’s been treated to inhibit sprouting/it’s not organic/it will explode on contact. OK maybe not that last one. But you’ll hear the other two a lot. I’m not going to get into the “organic vs. not organic” debate except to say that if you’re not dumping pesticides on it, your homegrown version will probably be healthier than conventionally-grown produce. So I’d worry less about what you started with that what you do with it after it’s in your yard. As for the bit about being treated to inhibit sprouting: I put old potatoes and onions in my yard after they sprout, so it’s not really a problem. (If they haven’t sprouted yet, I’m probably going to eat them). And I’ve grown garlic and shallots from supermarket stock many times with no issues. So don’t be afraid to ignore the naysayers and give it a try.
  • Fruit grown from seed (like the aforementioned avocado) can work, but don’t expect any fruit for several years, and don’t expect the fruit to be like the stuff you buy at Safeway. But if you want to do it for fun, go for it. Citrus is especially easy to start from seed.


OK, so I’ve directed you to a bunch of online resources. But does any of this actually work? Yes. Yes it does. I’ve started lots of stuff from cuttings: mint, basil, roses, citrus trees, rosemary, the pilfered spider plant, and probably a ton of other stuff I’ve forgotten. I dig and divide perennials like Shasta daisies and irises all the time, and I’ve started blackberries through layering. Instead of composting my onions when they sprout, I’ve started sticking them in the garden, regardless of the time of year, then using the tops as green onions. This year I stuck an old yellow onion in the ground in late winter. It has survived multiple hard freezes and snowfalls and is now sending up a bloom stalk. Onions are tough.




Propagation can be fun, and it’s especially satisfying to grow plants you’ve propagated yourself. Plus, it gives you bragging rights when your fellow green thumbs come over. “Oh, that? Yeah, I grew that from a cutting I got from my great-grandma. The original plant came over with my ancestors on the Mayflower.” Don’t forget to include a casual flip of the hand, as though this is an event so routine in your life that it barely warrants mentioning. Then you can be both a cheapskate gardener and a snob.


You’re welcome.