Revision 14 as of 2012-03-17 01:57:46

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Seed Propagation

Current status is: germinating for the first time. Anything related to keeping seedlings alive (light) is completely untested, but, assuming pieces of random advice from scattered forum postings across the Internet can be trusted, might even work.

Process

  1. Staring mixture: 1 part vermiculite, 1 part perlite, 1 part spaghum peat moss
  2. Fill peat trays 1/2-3/4 full with mixture
  3. Put 2-3ish seeds per pot to maximize chances of success (ClintonEbadi is perhaps a too-cautious person at times)

  4. Cover to the recommended planting depth
  5. Fill drainage tray with 3 quarts water (overfilled the first with a gallon, underfilled the second with two quarts, three seems to be enough to keep everything properly moist)
  6. Insert and mark seedling trays with business cards (variety + planting date + # of seeds/cell + expected germination date)
  7. Wrap the whole thing up in plastic wrap and wait

Equipment

Seeds to Order

Available Seed

Not Germinated Yet

Germinated

Herbs

Peppers

Currently Germinating

Organized by the tray they are in. Details on start dates &c coming once ClintonEbadi is unlazy enough to double check the labels on the germination trays. I seed everything in increments of ten cell peat pots.

GT0 is allocated to Chamomile+Dill, GT1 and GT2 are unallocated

Seedlings

Garden

Construction

Several small raised beds due to limited areas that receive enough sunlight, root infested soil (well, living in a forest does have its disadvantages), crappy soil, large drip lines, etc.

Cedar or Pine? Cedar may last longer, but this is being used at most 2 seasons... depends on the cost.

Soil

Soil: http://www.areamulchandsoils.com/mulch%20price%20page.htm ($20.50 per yard2)

Might need gravel for drainage.

Layout

Pending raised bed plans... at first glance, Square Foot Gardening looks like a reasonable framework to sketch things out.

We could make it square meter gardening, but the book recommends 4'x4' grids so we'd be losing some space, and wood in America comes in feet :(

Available (to us at least) board sizes are either 1x10x12 or 1x12x10; we want the beds to be at least one foot so square beds are wasting not-to-useful-sized pieces of lumber. Maybe a non-square design: 6x3 feet? 5x3?

Assuming use of 10' lumber ... 5x3 + 5x3 + 4x4 uses 5 pieces of lumber, with 6' of the last piece unused (throw in another 5x3 bed and piece of lumber to fix that ...). Or, 6x3 + 5x3 + 4x4 with no wasted lumber.

(doesn't work, Steve's wiki is too old)