Coffee

digitS'

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starting seeds like in an area set aside outside just for transplanting. ...mostly for flowers and not vegetables
A seed bed.

Any that you think it are okay to move as seedlings in a garden row for better spacing, those could have been started in a seed bed. Vegetables like onions, beets and chard should make good choices. Seeds that may have trouble with germination may especially benefit if the plants are suitable for transplanting. We have had a lot of trouble with sunflower seedlings being eaten by critters and they do just fine with transplanting but the attacks are usually so bad that we start them in the greenhouse. Surprisingly, they are generally left alone when they show up beyond the sprouted seed stage.

I hope that you have good production and fun in 2026, GwR.

Steve
 

flowerbug

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I have had my coffee and I went out with my camera and took a couple of pictures of seedlings next to the house coming up. One is a lupine and the others are I think that plant that came up last year and I did not know what it was and it turned out to be larkspur. It is 41 degrees already and the sun shinning. It is supposed to get to 53 today.

DD and I went to Walmart yesterday and bought a few flower seeds. I am going through my seeds and getting ready to make online orders. She wants to start seeds in milk jugs. I might do a few. I am going to set my greenhouse back up in the kitchen, but I remember reading about starting seeds like in an area set aside outside just for transplanting. I am not sure what it was called. You plant all these seeds in an area and then when they come up you take them and transplant to the area you want. I am not sure what the point is other than I think the ground is soft and easy to transplant. I am going to have a lot of flowers coming up in areas that I will have to just hoe them down or transplant to a better area. I think this idea was mostly for flowers and not vegetables.

if you can find enough square pots that are fairly deep you can put them all in the same area right next to each other and fill them with some potting soil and perhaps a mix of your garden soil and then use your seeds in those pots and remember to water them enough so they don't dry out.

when the sprouts come up you have a chance of knowing what they are and using larger pots means the roots should have some chance of not being too heavily disturbed when you plant them someplace else.

for perennial plants i suggest growing them a few years if possible before planting them out - it will give you a better chance of having them survive plus you get to see how they get through a winter and what they're like (and if you really do want to plant them out at all).
 

digitS'

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zGNight.jpg
 

digitS'

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Cut a Honeycrisp apple into quarters — managed my morning challenge by slicing through the stem 3 times! Diced, raisins added, it went into the microwave for 90 seconds.

Sprinkled Honeycomb cereal on top. Poured on the almond milk. With a cup of oolong, breakfast.

I've waited long enough for electric/gas bill so that I can pay bills all at once. Might just mail them a check when they finally get around to it. That'll teach 'em! Will settle accounts with the others this AM :).

Good Morning!
 

baymule

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On my second cup of coffee. It's been a whirlwind around here! I've had my 2 youngest granddaughters all week, I take them to my sister's tomorrow after church to meet their parents and give them back. We've had lots of fun. I have another bottle lamb, 2 orphans (their mom died) and I'm trying to get them on the bottle. Up to 40 lambs with 1 more ewe to lamb. I'll get caught up on my farm thread next week!
 

Marie2020

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This morning I had cottage cheese on sourdough bread with cucumber and tomato. Followed by my vitamin D3 and k2 capsule.

It's been another grey day with not so much rain. Its damp but at least Nancy can get outside.
 
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