Saturday, May 4, 2013

The heat is here!

The heat is here!
Finally.  
This being Saturday I had time to head to Canadian Tire for a bag of municipal compost and some drain rocks. Once home I transplanted a few of the bigger saplings today.
Below is the Sub Arctic Maxi in its new pot.  


Below is a view of the the tray of remaining Sub Arctic Maxi tomatoes.  These four and a tomatillo, didn't seem quite big enough to transplant yet.  In the next few days they should be monsters worthy of planting.

Below are the 2 flats of seedlings, I put them out in the sun and breeze to begin to harden them off.  Over the next couple of weeks I expect they will transition into larger pots.

Here are the rest of today's transplants, shown below.  From back to front: 2 tomatillos sharing one large pot, another sub arctic maxi tomato plant in a somewhat smaller pot, a single tomatillo in its own pot, and at the front a tomatillo sharing a pot with a Hungarian Hot Wax Pepper.  This pepper seemed to be the only one large enough to bear a transplant yet...even then I might have been pushing it, but I was excited to get it into a pot with another plant.

That's all for today, but what a landmark day it is, when the seedlings make it into their big-boy pots!  Happy planting.  

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Everything is getting a little bit bigger

We have seen continued success in the seedlings department.  I am quite happy with the grow lights this year.  We have continued to experience a cold April this year.  It is currently 0C and it is April 21 today.  We also have not been getting many sunny days.  So the grow lights have been good to have around.

In the photo above the largest plants are the tomatillos.  The grow lights really helped prevent them from getting too leggy.  Last year all but one died as a result of being too leggy.  In the foreground the peat seed pellet is a Gusto Purple Pepper.  The tomato in the middle ground is a Lemon Boy.


Above is the latest seedlings to crop up.  This tray is a real mixed bag of everything from Yellow Pear tomatoes, Totem F1 tomatoes, Hot Wax peppers and Purple Gusto peppers.  The seeds with the worst germination rate this year are the Organic Yellow Pear.  I think I have about 3 of them out of all I planted.

The Sub Arctic tomatoes are the hands-down off to the races winners this year.  They are doing very well.  I had to stake them up to keep them from bending over into the sun, but otherwise seem to be very well suited to the cooler climate and obviously are vigorous growers.

Above is an overhead shot to show you what the growing set up looks like right now.  We are about to go out of town for a week and have a house sitter, so I have the lights on timers, and the only thing the house sitter needs to do is water the trays. I will not be expecting any seedlings that sprout while we are away to survive, or be transplanted into pots, so this is the extent of the tomato and pepper crop this year.  I might have a peek into the seed incubator when I get back and see if there is anything to salvage, but I am not going to get my hopes up.

Seed Count:

Sub Arctic - 5
Hot Wax - 7
Gusto Purple - 5
Toma Verde - 5
Lemon Boy - 5
Totem - 2
Yellow Pear - 2
Unknown - 2 (Ran out of plant i.d. tags)

All in all it seems like an interesting, diverse crop is shaping up this year.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

One round of sprouts, one more round of sowing

Another snowy weekend in Edmonton.  Sigh.  I'm not letting it hold the garden back yet.

This week on Friday the Toma Verde's were the first to sprout!  This year I am determined to see them live, so I had made an advance purchase of 2 cantilever desk lamps and some grow bulbs.  I want to make sure the seedlings get the light they need to live rather than straining them selves to death as they did last year.  This year every sign so far seems to indicate the lighting is making an impact.

The second seeds to burst forth from the earth was the Sub Arctic Plenty's.  All seeds sown have germinated.

The third seeds to make it above ground are a couple (so far) of Lemon Boy tomatoes.  We had a little scare this afternoon where they seemed to droop a bit, but I think it was a reflection of taking them out of their domes and the shock of dealing with the dry air.

With all 3 of these seedlings moving out of the incubators and into 3 inch pots I decided to sow 3 more varieties of seeds.  Today I planted the following into the Jiffy Peat Pellets, and placed the incubators on the heat pad and radiator:

8x Totem F1 Hybrid tomato from William Dam Seeds
8x Yellow Pear Organic tomato from William Dam Seeds
8x Gusto Purple pepper from Vesey's

Pictures of the set up:
 Here (above) you can see the still-inculbating Hot Wax peppers and where some of the Lemon Boys were living until they were potted this morning. The freshly planted Yellow Pear seeds can be seen in the incubator on the radiator in the background.

 Above are visible the new sprouts, a mix of Toma Verde tomatillos and Sub Arctic Pleanty tomatoes.  The stainless steel desk lamps make easily adjustable grow lamps.  The lamp on the left has a Ottlite Gro Bulb CFL and the lamp on the right has a Philips Daylight CFL.

 What at this time appears to be a happy and healthy Sub Arctic Plenty sprout.

The entire first tray of sprouts can be seen in this lengthwise photo.   In this view is the new Lemon Boy, Sub Arctic Plenty, and the Toma Verdes.

New this year is the timer to control the CFL grow lights. I have it set so that no matter the weather there is an ample supply of light for 16 hours a day.

That's it for this week's instalment of Just Leafy!

Sunday, March 31, 2013

2013 First Planting

Well it was a nice sunny Easter Sunday and all the shops were closed, so I poked into my storage closet to see what gardening supplied I had on-hand.  Lo and behold I had enough potting soil and seeds to get the first planting of 2013 into the soil and sun!

Here is the list of seedlings sown:
5x Lemon Boy tomatoes
10x Toma Verde tomatillos (2 per pot, 5 pots)
5x Sub Arctic Plenty tomatoes
13x Hungarian Hot Wax peppers

Here is a photo of the sown seeds soaking up the sun and warmth.















Future plantings will be made in the coming week once seeds on order arrive.

On order from Vesey's is:
Gusto Purple Hot Pepper
3x20 inch window sill heat mat

On order from William Dam Seeds:
Corentine cucumbers
Mesclun mix
Totem F1 hybrid tomatoes
Yellow Pear Organic tomatoes
Fern Leaf Dwarf Dill
Greenhouse growers plant clips

Stay tuned to the Just Leafy blog for updates on germination, transplanting, vegetable production, recipes and year-end canning and salsa making.  Happy gardening!

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Summer heat brings peppers to life!

It is 31C in Edmonton today.  
Yesterday this heat trigged 2 of the cayenne peppers to flip from green to red.  Check it out:


And below the tomatoes are looking bushy!




Close up of the 'patio tomoato' from Arches Greenhouse; its bearing fruit all over!



Here is the lone surviving tomatillo in bloom:



Friday, June 8, 2012

Early June Update

Time for another update! It's early june and all the plants have been hardened off and moved outside.  I could be a bit paranoid but I feel the tomatoes are rather skinny, and slow growing this year.  I did re-use the soil so there could be some nutrient loss, but I mixed in compost and fertilizers to try and compensate for that.  Last year the soils were new, but unfortified (i.e. not compost) so I'm a bit skeptical that this is the sole cause.  It is early going still so there could be a warm week that gets them growing thicker and more robust.

Here are the seedlings inside for the night after being outside to harden off.

 A closer look at the pepper seedlings after transplanting into 4' pots.

 Hollyhock from Archs Greenhouses, first bloom of the year on June 6
 A view of the tomatoes and peppers - note the skinny tomatoes. 

A little burst of colour.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

True Leaves Begin to Emerge

Just a quick update to say that I had to replant several seeds this weekend. Overall everything germinated, but for example the 4 tomatillos that germinated then rotted before they could get going. I had about one-third of my seedlings fail to germinate, or emerge and then die off.  I attribute this to the poor weather last weekend, it snowed and was cold an overcast so the seedlings did not get much heat or sun.  Also several of the peat pots experienced forms of mould.  This is because I did not use sterile potting soil or seed starting mix.  This is an error I won't repeat.  
So the photo above shows the remaining two-thirds of the seedlings that are off to a good start and have begun to grow their first sets of true leaves.  In the meantime I purchased a bunch of sterile peat pucks that I have used to sow a follow up batch of plants, a little bit of everything, to make sure I have a full crop this year.  Today I watered these little guys with a Miracle-Gro Quick Start starting solution plant food 4-12-4.  Hopefully they enjoy the good weather expected over the next few days.