Growing Thoughts | Garden Resolutions for 2014

Photo courtesy of Big Stock.

Photo courtesy of Big Stock.

Our editor, Therese Ciesinski, shares some gardening resolutions ambitions for the New Year.

I hesitate to call them resolutions. Suggestions, perhaps. Food for thought? Whatever the name, here are four things to consider as you make your spring gardening plans.

Start your own seeds

I’m always surprised when a long-time gardener tells me he doesn’t start his own seeds, but buys transplants instead. We do so many less interesting and less rewarding tasks in the garden, so it’s hard to believe he thinks seed starting is tedious. Is it fear of failure, or is it corralling all the supplies and setting up that’s the challenge? Gathering the lights, trays, planting mediums, etc., can be confusing at first, but once you do, you are set for years.

Starting your own seeds means you decide what you plant, and when you plant it, and determine what will grow best in your particular garden micro-climate. Buying vegetable and flower transplants leaves you at the mercy of merchants, who want tough plants that can take the rigors of shipping, and not necessarily the most flavorful or beautiful varieties. It also means you control the inputs, including pesticides, herbicides and other chemicals.

Starting seeds yourself means personalizing your gardening experience from start to finish, reaping the rewards and owning the failures. It’s bragging rights. And it is a kind of exploration. The average person will never climb K2, or discover a new plant in China, but seed starting is an expedition into a world that’s mysterious, yet explainable, where things will go right and things will go wrong, and you won’t always know why. And that’s what will keep you coming back. That, and tasting the fantastic Brandywine tomatoes you grew for the very first time.

Buy organic seeds and plants

And if you already start your own seeds, why not make sure the ones you buy are organic? If you endeavor to choose organic at the supermarket or farmers market, then organic seeds are a logical next step. Buying organic seed offers the satisfaction of knowing the plants you grow are organic from start to finish. Organically grown seeds aren’t coated with fungicide as some conventionally grown seed is. And the farmers growing this seed for sale are improving their land by managing it organically. That’s healthier for the farm workers and for you. Plus, by demanding organic seed, you’ll ensure demand, which encourages suppliers to offer more.

If you’re using peat moss, stop it.

If you are buying potting soil or seed-starting medium that contains peat moss, or using bales of it as a soil amendment, don’t. Peat moss comes from wetlands (bogs) where decaying plants, including sphagnum moss, accumulate in deep layers over thousands of years, storing immense amounts of carbon. To mine peat, the bog is drained of water, living plants are destroyed, and the peat is removed to a depth up to 6 feet. This releases the stored carbon into the atmosphere, contributing to climate change. Peat moss, while natural, is not a renewable resource because, at an accumulation rate of  a quarter-inch a year, “renewable” takes thousands of years.

And when you take into consideration how difficult peat moss is to rewet once it dries out, and that it is devoid of nutrients, you wonder why any gardener would use it. Alternatives such as coir, a byproduct of the coconut industry, are good for seed starting and for potting soil. Compost and composted leaves are better for the soil in your garden, and much cheaper.

Buy from local garden centers instead of big retail chains

Buying local isn’t just for farmers markets. All over the country, locally-owned garden centers—the mom and pop places that have been serving their communities for decades—struggle because they can’t offer the rock-bottom prices on plants and supplies that the big box stores can.

What they can and do offer is more plant variety, better quality plants, and, of course, years of knowledge about how to grow those plants in your area; knowledge that no youngster in an orange apron has.

Sure, buy a flat of “bargain” petunias occasionally while you’re stocking up on light bulbs or getting a gallon of paint, but when it comes to the plants that matter, the perennials, trees, shrubs you’ll have for years, go with the local experts.

So, do you start your own seeds?  Buy organic seed? If you do, share your experiences in the comments section.

Therese Ciesinski, Garden Variety’s Editor-at-Large, is the longtime former editor of Organic Gardening magazine. She has won multiple awards from the Garden Writers Association and has lectured across the U.S. on gardening, horticulture and living an organic lifestyle. A New York University graduate, Therese has been a master gardener in both Rhode Island and Pennsylvania. She lives in a little log cabin next to a trout stream in Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania, where she maintains a shade-shrouded garden. She loves roses but her sunlight-challenged property has left her trying to fall for hostas instead. She enjoys home renovation projects, travel and is a self-confessed “picker” who buys and sells antiques and vintage finds, especially industrial objects.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
10 Organic Resolutions Worth Keeping for Life
New Garden Vegetables, Flowers and Herbs for 2014
The Top 24 Must-Have Mobile Apps for Gardeners

 

About The Editors of Garden Variety

The Magazine-style Daily Lifestyle Blog of Gardening, Outdoor Spaces and Natural Living. https://gardenvarietynews.wordpress.com
This entry was posted in Garden, Seed Starting, Uncategorized and tagged , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Growing Thoughts | Garden Resolutions for 2014

  1. Good resolutions… I hadn’t realized that peat moss was an environmental concern. I don’t use too much, but I’ll definitely make an adjustment to other soils now.

  2. timelesslady says:

    I also did not realize an alternative to peat moss would be a better choice for seed starting. Thanks for this great post.

  3. macmsue says:

    I planted Melon seeds and none came up so I bought some seedlings and put them in now 3 of the 4 seedlings have failed but the seeds I planted have sprouted and overtaken the sole survivor, I guess slow and steady really does win the race. Will be collecting my own seeds this season. Thanks for a good article.

We love to read and appreciate your comments, conversation, debate, opinion, anecdotes and facts. No selling or promotional links to products or services. Personal attacks, name-calling, foul language, racist remarks or otherwise abusive statements will not be tolerated.

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s