What's up with me:
I love Territorial Seed. I look
forward to their spring catalogue every year. It's become a bit of a
tradition for me, even if I haven't always grown a garden every year.
There is something wonderful about flipping through it, looking for
new items, seeing vegetables or fruits that I've never heard of
before. They frequently offer many rare or unique cultivars, like
everyone's darling last year, the indigo rose tomato, developed in
Oregon at OSU.
I remember while I was growing up, how
I would thumb through it, always telling my dad and mom that I want
to grow one of everything. My dad, learning from his mom, became a
gardener. He would always get tons of seed and plant catalogues
every year, each new one was a treasure, looking for plants that I
had never heard of or ever seen before. Territorial always stuck out
to me, there was always something about their style, their wonderful
information, and their selection that made me enjoy it every single
time.
Never one to disappoint, Territorial
had another beautiful catalogue filled with tons of new cultivars and
a new book that I am absolutely intrigued with, The Drunken
Botanist. Written by Amy
Stewart, the book chronicles many unique drink mixes, with
Territorial offering many of the plants and herbs required for the
drinks. They're even hosting videos of her on their youtube account,
alongside their awesome planting and harvesting help videos.
I absolutely
recommend Territorial Seed for their great variety and absolutely
great quality, plus, for you Northwesterners, it's a local company.
I've already gotten
my seeds from them this year, and started most of them. I just use
Jiffy starters (which are just tiny tiny greenhouses with many
seeding “pots”, they are cheap, but generally last a couple years
(plus they're recyclable if they do fall apart). I did my planting
about a week ago and already have about 1/2 of my plants coming up.
No tomatoes or peppers yet, but they generally take longer than the
rest (tomatoes can be a couple weeks, peppers can be up to 3).
Sadly, I lost two
of my wasabi starts, and I think I'm starting to see a trend with the
variety Mazuma, it is very
susceptible to fungal attacks, which is probably a big part of why
Daruma is more widely grown. As it stands, I have one of each left
(the other Daruma start was just too small, and didn't really take
off), and I've decided that I've had enough of fungal infections
(seeing as I recently lost my poinsettia to one as well. I purchased
an organic sulfur-based fungicide, and, not wanting any repeats, have
already used in on my remaining wasabi. I'm not going to take any
chances, even with the stronger Daruma.
What's up with the
season:
This Winter in the
Northwest has been pretty mild and very dry. It's raining a bit as I
write this, however, I have a sinking feeling that we're going to
have a dry summer. Our snow pack in the Willamette Valley isn't as
good as it should be. I'm hoping we won't have a drought, but I'm
nervous that we'll have a minor one at the very least.
Otherwise, now is a
great time to get your seedlings started indoors if you haven't yet.
Tulips are blooming right now, as are daffodils, and many others. My
favorite Oregon-native flowers, Trilliums, are blooming too.
What's up in the
world:
If you live in the
Portland Metro Area, the Tualatin Hills Nature Park is having small
Saturday plant sales for the next couple weeks, leading up to a very
large one on the 27th of April from 10a-2p. I'll be elsewhere that
weekend, but I would love to go otherwise. They're having a native
plant sale, selling somewhere in the range of 70+ native Northwest
plants.
Next month there is
the Spring Garden Fair in Canby, OR. I'll definitely be going, and
my wonderful colleagues from Sarracenia Northwest will be there too.
I've never been, but I'm excited to go. I think it'll be a lot of
fun.
I just caught an
awesome episode of Nature on OPB (our local PBS station) this
morning, What Plants Talk About. It just aired last week and
looked into the chemical signaling that plants use to talk to
eachother as well as the signals they use to fight against predation
as well as other plants. It was great, if you have an hour, check it
out, the full episode is online.
Alright everyone!
Good growing!
Links:
Spring Garden Fair:
Metro Master
Gardeners April planting guide:
Territorial Seed
Company:
Nature (PBS/OPB), What Plants Talk
About:
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/what-plants-talk-about/video-full-episode/8243/
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/what-plants-talk-about/video-full-episode/8243/
As always, good read and great information! I'm hoping to get some seedlings started this weekend. I'd love to meet up at some point to pick your brain about patio growing cause that's what I'll be doing. That Metro Master link looks like it's pretty useful too. I wouldn't mind checking out the Tualatin Hills Nature Park sale, so give me a buzz if you want to organize a trip together. Good luck with your wasabi this year!
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