With all the freezing cold outside (and trust me; it is
freezing cold outside) the thing that helps save my sanity is the flood of seed
catalogs I get every winter. (Odd considering I usually hate junk mail.)
The good old fashioned seed catalogs 1) Remind me what
growing things look like, as opposed to all the white frozen stuff around me.
2) Causes me to think about experimenting with varieties of vegetables I haven't
tried before. 3) Offer help with problems I have growing things.
Case in point: a good many of my neighbors seem to be able
to grow strawberries and blueberries. I have spent a shameful amount of money
trying to do likewise to no avail. I have yet to harvest a single berry; just a
lot of dead plants. (hangs head in shame)
We received a nice big seed catalog from the Jung Seed
Company (No, I am not affiliated with them in any way!) and my husband got to
it first. He suddenly says, "Hey, I think I found your problem."
(This could cover so many things!) I raised an eyebrow. "What?" He
smiled. "Your dead blueberries," he elaborated, and handed me the
catalog.
Now, aside from the numerous seeds and plants offered in
seed catalogs, they also offer tidbits about why one might be having a
particular problem and of course the products they sell to remedy the
situation. We had our farm soil tested last year and they all had pretty much
the same result: our soil is neutral, as in, not acidic at all, especially
around where I plant our food. Blueberries need acidic soil to grow. Well, I'll
be. I have some work to do this spring and I will be getting the suggested
products either from the catalog or locally if I can find it. Quite frankly,
plants seldom survive the journey from any company to our farm anyway (like
sweet potatoes-ahhh!), but the seeds and other products do well and if not
available locally, I will go to the catalogs.
Image courtesy of Grant Cochrane/ FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Stock Photo - image ID: 10090261
What I have started is my own gardening book of sorts and
you can too. Peruse the catalogs for the types of produce, flowers, bushes,
trees, etcetera, you prefer and see if they have growing tips and
troubleshooting tidbits. Cut them out of the catalog and put them in a binder
by category. That way you can find them easily when you run into something with
your plants. This is fairly inexpensive –you still will need a binder and
something on which to collect the articles. Print off articles you may find
online or cut out agricultural articles in magazines and trade newspapers (I
have done this for animal health) and add them to your binder. You can also
obtain leaflets from your state's university extension service. It is way less
expensive than buying an entire book, or books, just for one or two problems
and you have what you need at your fingertips.
Now, if someone could just help me with those strawberries!