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Ah, ah, ah, ah. Stayin’ Alive, Stayin’ Alive.

3 Apr

Our herbs, that is!

Class is tonight, and I’m very excited! I think we’ll have a good size class. It’s not just about planting herbs to use in cooking, but part of the activity will be decorating the planters. Yes, full grown adults will be using paint markers, hot glue, giant rhinestones, and I don’t even know what other art and craft supplies are waiting for us. There’s something soothing about each aspect of tomorrow evening: the plants, the markers, the conversation, the wine…. 🍷

But bringing a bit of green into an apartment is always nice. Keeping it alive and healthy is an ongoing chore/battle/challenge/task, depending on the level of obligation you feel. Regardless of your love for your little pot of herbs, they’ll all need light, water, and food. Here’s a brief primmer on each. I’m going to include a few links here and there. I’ll grab them from a few places online, but I don’t have any relationship with any of these place and don’t make any money from any links. That would be super, but I don’t.

Light

A sunny window probably won’t be enough light for most herbs. Even a bright south facing window would only work for part of the year. Most glass will block out some of the sun’s rays. If you’ve ever tried to grow basil inside and you wound up with loooong stems and just a few leaves facing the outside, it was searching for more light! For the most control and flexibility in where you place your herbs, I’d highly recommend grow lights. 12 hours a day is fine for year-round growth, but even 8 hours is ok. Then they’ll need some time to sleep. Lights that offer a full spectrum of light that mimics the sun are your best bet for your indoor adult herb garden.

Many lights now have built in timers that will automatically cycle on and off, but you can also pick up traditional timers that you plug in to the socket and then plug your light in. I really like using bluetooth timers. They connect to my wifi and then I control them with my phone. I have several sets around my home and can control each one precisely.

You don’t have to get too complicated here. There are many inexpensive options, including clip on lamps, long strip bulbs that will fit under a shelf, hanging fixtures for tall structures, and floor lamps.

Water

Drainage is key. The pots we have selected for our herbs have good drainage at the bottom, but in general you don’t want to overwater. Root rot means death! Water every three to four days, depending on how dry your room is, but wait until the top inch or so is dry before watering again. If your soil feels like a wrung out sponge, that’s perfect! If your soil still feels a little damp at day 4, check it again in 12 hours, and then 12 hours after that. Be slow and consistent in watering. Too much at once will immediately flow through your pot and make it seem like you’ve over watered, when in fact your soil just isn’t able to absorb it all. Too little won’t soak through to your roots. You can divide your watering into two “sips” with a few minutes apart to help absorption. If you see droopy leaves, your little guys are thirsty. Water in several sips over about 30 minutes and then wait a few hours. They should start to perk up.

Food

Plants need not just water, but some food, too. You should feed your guys every 2-4 weeks or so. You can use an all purpose liquid plant food during a regular watering time, diluted to about half of the recommended strength. Liquids are immediately available to plants, instead of a slow release pelleted food that will have to slowly break down in your soil over time. You can buy a little bottle and it will last a long time! Here are some options. Again, I have no connections to any of these links, they’re just examples of the brands.

  • I used this organic fish fertilizer to grow our herbs. It’s amazing, but extra stinky. It’ll be fine if you’re not growing 6 flats, though! Great for other houseplants, too. Again, I dilute it to about half the recommended strength.
  • I haven’t use this particular type of Espoma food, but I really like their other products, so I’d probably give this tomato and vegetable food a try . I use many of their foods and fertilizers for outdoor gardening, and used their seed starting mix for our herbs.
  • Here is a pump food. Apply right to the soil, then water over it. No separate measuring.
  • I haven’t used this brand myself, but I know people like it a lot.

Next post…how to harvest!

Deliciously Stinky Fishy Fertilizer

13 Mar

I knew this stuff was going to smell, but wow. At the advice of one of my garden wizard friends, I fed my babies. I should have thought of it, but I did not. I’m glad I have her to coach me. So, two weeks ago I mixed up some organic liquid fish fertilizer at 1/2 strength and then soaked the cell flats for about an hour at a time in the solid trays to bottom water before putting them back in their mesh trays for proper air flow.

We’ve had two feedings so far, and all of the herbs have responded very well. Everyone is perky and we’ve had significant growth since then, so I think we’ll be ready to go right on time. They’ve had a nice watering since then, as well. That will probably be all for feeding before they go to their new homes, but we’ll see. The ProMix soil I’m planning to use to pot them doesn’t have food, so I might wind up using something different.

Tickets are now on sale for my Herb Garden class at The Lillian and Albert Small Capital Jewish Museum on April 3! You can decorate a fun planter and take these babies home with you to grow and enjoy in your meals.

Seed Starting Update: Lights!

9 Jan

Lights are installed! Zip ties came with the lights. I used 6 of the 8 2′ long strips I bought, which will be one per flat. Connected them all together and installed the timer that I’ll control on my phone. The top shelf will be two flats of basil because I couldn’t fit enough shelves on for the six flats and I didn’t want to have anything on the floor of the tub. It’s fine. The curtain still closes without touching anything. (Yay curved shower curtain rod!)

I got 5 bags of Espoma seed starting mix from Esbenshade’s Garden Center near Lancaster, PA. They had the best pricing, even with shipping. Arrived quickly. Looks like they have really good online reviews, too. At the volume I’ll need, I could have made my own, I suppose, but this will just be easier and cleaner. The flats of trays came from True Leaf Market. Pretty cool.

Just waiting for the solid drip trays to arrive today. Then I can get going! My goal is to have everything ready to go by Jan 17, but I’ll be at least a week earlier than that. Not sure if having an extra week is a good thing or not! Class is on April 3. Gotta think this through.

Seeds from Baker Creek. I’ll have one tray each of parlsey, dill, cilantro, basil, and purple basil. I started a few 3 year old packets about three weeks ago as something I could coo over while I waited for all of my supplies to arrive, and had a pretty good showing from the purple but meh from the Genovese. I’ll replant them into larger containers soon. But fresher seeds for this year should have better germination.

Here’s a little IG reel thingie. I’m not great a this, please bear with me!

Let’s Grow Some Herbs!

2 Jan

I’m going to be teaching an indoor herb garden class in April. Folks will decorate their own pots, pick their herbs, and learn how to harvest and care for their plants indoors!

Here’s my math. Everyone will get to pick three plants. Assuming all 40 class slots fill up, that’s 120 in total. I’m starting one flat of parlsey, dill, cilantro, basil, and purple basil. Each flat here will have 36 cells, plus I’ll do one extra 6 cell of each as insurance to make sure I have enough for everyone. That’s potentially 216 babies to care for! After the class, I will donate some of the remaining seedlings to Plot Against Hunger gardeners.

I’ll be growing in my guest bathroom using this wire rack. For weeks I couldn’t figure out how to set up this whole system, as I never grown on this scale before. Duh. Wire racks! Then ones I already had were juuuuust a smidge too big for the bathtub. So, I bought a small rack and planned to keep two flats on each shelf width-wise. Then I realized I had a tall rack in a closet. I took that out and added one shelf from the new small rack and voilà! They’re 8″ apart now, so I’ll see what the final distance winds up being. I will probably need to adjust the distance to the lights a few times. I decided not to use the bottom shelf/tub floor for the sixth tray or to build a little holder thing for lights on top, so I’ll keep the two basils together on one shelf. I’ll zip tie lights to the underside of the shelves and connect all of the lights in a chain.

This week I’m expecting delivery of the lights, seeds, Espoma seed starting mix, sheets of 2.25″ cells, and the solid trays these mesh trays will sit in. I’m not going to use heat mats, as the room should get pretty warm if I close the curtain and door. Humidity should be ok without covers, but just in case, I can wrap the whole rack in some plastic I’m holding on to from another project. My goal is to have it all set up and running by Jan 17, which will give me about 11 weeks before my class.

I’ll update each step, maybe with a video or two.