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Is it Spring yet?

January 29th, 2010

Here in Portland, we always seem to get a window of Spring-like weather in the middle of February. It’s traditionally the time to direct sow peas, onions, and radishes, and to start tomatoes and peppers indoors. Even though the gods of climate generally plunge us back into the dark and rainy for another month, the opportunity to get the garden going is like a life-line from the future: a reminder that—even though we haven’t seen the sun for two weeks—Spring really does exist.

But this year’s Spring-tease has come early: It’s only January 28th, we haven’t had a hard freeze in a month, and it’s been in the upper 40s and low 50s for over two weeks. The tulips are up, buds are swelling on the cherry trees, and I’m faced with an exciting dilemma: Do I risk some the peas I saved last year and hope the mercury doesn’t dip far below freezing again?

Of course!

Get Growing Early

SodaBottleMiniHothouse005-main_Full.jpgHere in Oregon, even though we can grow many vegetables almost year-round, lots of folks don’t start thinking about planting until April or May, a full 2-3 months after many seeds could have already been in the ground. These gardeners not only miss out on some of the best time for cold season crops (radish, arugula, spinach, etc.), but they also miss out on a lot of productivity. While it varies by species and climate, planting sooner generally means that plants reach maturity faster, and thus, yield more.
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Tuesday Roundup: Thoreau and Shrinkwrap

January 26th, 2010

Getting this one out a little late today. I generally try to get posts done the night before and scheduled to go up in the middle of the night, but I was up for a while last night putting up the third installment of the greywater series.

Just in time for lunch, a few tasty morsels:

Project Thoreau

aug_2009_update.jpgIn my ongoing (and generally successful) quest to distract myself from the things I really need to get done, I read most of what comes out of the Permaculture Research Institute of Australia’s blog. Over the past year or so, I’ve been enthused by the intermittent updates from a renter permaculturist (I need a single word for that: renterculturist? permarenter? arrgh!) in Australia working on a little thing she’s calling Project Thoreau. The updates, which include birds-eye-view photos of a tiny back patio and yard, show her progress over the last 2+ years of experimentation, and offer an inspiring model for what can be done in minimal space.

[photo: permaculture.org.au]
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