Friday, April 22, 2011

{Recycling} Earth Day Eco Picks

Happy Earth Day folks!  I just finished a post on my work blog about Easy Eco Tips for the Office, but really most of my Earth Day activites are centred around my gardens.  I'll be shopping for plants this afternoon, but have already made two purchases to help me be a more eco-concious gardner.

I've been looking at these items for a while, and Earth Day seemed to be a good excuse to treat myself. :)

Newspaper Potter.
I actually hardly ever have newspapers in the house, but I do have an abundance of magazines, flyers, envelopes etc that I am hoping I can use.

I have no shortage of pots at the moment, but as I am hoping to sell many of my young plants to raise money for charity this gadget should prove to be a useful tool, and I have a few ideas for marketing ideas too. (I'll keep you posted!)

Rapid Root Trainer
These pots are as much to save my poor wee seedlings from my clumsy and impatient fingers as they are to reduce waste.

Trying to untangle, tease out and replant my delicate seedlings I think I killed most of them. Luckily I had planned for my inexperience resulting in a high mortality rate, so I had banked on numbers saving my garden from a total loss!

I look forward to using these pots to create seedlings that will grow neatly, allow me to check root development, and easily transplant into their final home.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Garden Themed Social Icons

    

In my other life... when I am actually earning money instead of playing in the dirt... I am an online marketing and branding consultant.  A fancy title which basically means I have made so many mistakes while experimenting online that I am finally qualified to tell people what works.

While browsing around my Twitter feed the other day I found some fab social icons in garden themes, that I just had to share here.   Originally from a roundup of over 40 free sets.

Feel free to download and use for your own blog or site, and be sure to comment if you know of other great webby stuff for gardeners.


Sunday, April 10, 2011

To Prick or Not to Prick

I suspect that I will face this kind of dilemma frequently in the coming months, as I plunge my hands further into the gardening world.  This time, I had to decide whether or not my lavatera seedlings were ready to be pricked out.

The proper answer is probably no; they are small and fragile and not over-congested, but they have started to wilt, and I suspect this is because the egg carton I planted them in is too shallow for their developing root systems.   Keen to spend some time gardening today, as well as experiment, I decided to prick out half of them and leave the other half.

We'll see what happens in a week!

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Food Glorious Food

This week really had me kicking myself that I keep forgetting to take before pictures to illustrate how effective a gardening experiment has been.

Potted Gardenia now sweetly blooming
Last autumn, when I was preparing the flower beds in my front garden (previously all overgrown lawn) one bed had a particular special treat.  When I had finished digging, my neighbour appeared with several grow bags that he had left over, and we spread these across one bed.  The difference in flower production and plant quality between this bed and the two others was astounding.   While violas, cyclamen and dianthus in the "poor" bed struggled to survive the winter, leaving only a few ragged discoloured leaves and stalks for spring, the plants in the "rich" bed continued to bloom almost all winter.

Last week I spread rich compost over the neglected beds, and wow! The results were so dramatic and fast that I was really amazed.  The poor stragglers have once again flourished and practically doubled in size, and the bed now has a show of purple, white and yellow pansy flowers.

Based on the results, I grabbed a pack of flower and plant food when I picked up seeds this weekend, and after just a single feed my indoor plants look healthier, with glossy leaves and lots of new shoots, leaving me feeling like a very proud plant mum!

Next up... how to repot my orchids and encourage them to follow suit!

Friday, April 8, 2011

Indoor Garden

Who says you need a greenhouse or expensive propagation kits to grow plants from seeds?  Since most of my plants will be used for guerilla gardening projects, or donated to raise money for local charities, (more on this later) I have a strong motivation to save money.

My home office has been turned into quite an indoor garden, with literally thousands of seeds tucked in cosy compost beds enjoying light from the window and a steady warmth from a radiator turned down low.

The planting containers are all recycled, making good use of take out trays, food containers and even egg cartons (ideal for larger seeds that won't need pricked out later.)  Number 1 is VERY pleased to finally see me put these saved containers to good use instead of piling up in my gardening cupboard!


As for the seeds themselves, I have also been mean with my purse strings.  This is largely because of the disappointment I have felt this Spring at the sparse display in my borders despite having spent a fair whack of cash on bulbs from catalogues.

Scrambled Egg on my Face
Image from vanmeuwen.com
 Unusual varieties of Daffodils failed to come up at all (and I was SO looking forward to the pink Replete variety) while the lovely double bloomed ones (nicknamed Scrambled Egg daffodils by my Mum) did flash their lovely heads but had such weak stems that they sent their blooms careening to the ground as soon as they flourished.

 My snowdrop bulbs sprouted a few half hearted leaves (lesson learned I will buy them in the green next year)  and the hardy Muscari practically swamped the beds with clumps of leaves before sending out single blue flower stems that look quite silly amongst all the foliage.

Cheap Seeds
So when it came to planting seeds, I wanted to see the results from going to the other extreme.  Dad came to the rescue, donating a veritable booty of seed packets from his gardening stash, however most of these past their "best before" date around the same time as Bobby Ewing stepped out of the shower.

Never one to be put off however, I planted many of them, and after 7 days there are already many, many green shoots coming up to greet me each morning.

My second source of seeds was a three for £2 deal from a local discount store.  Cheap seeds=weak plants, right?  Yet many of these seeds are the varieties sold by a well known plant catalogue for four times the price.   They are going to be planted this week, and I will be sure to let you know the results, both for germination and flower production.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Free Beetroot Seeds

As well as being a keen gardener, I am also an avid freebie hunter, so I was thrilled to hear about Free Beetroot Seeds being sent out to anyone who registers with BTCV's Carbon Army. (Hey, another worthwhile grassroots cause too!)

Head over to their site and sign up to claim your free seeds.

Oh, and if you like freebies, try my other blog Best Free Beauty Samples.