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Old 15-02-2015, 08:48 PM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Default Runnin' out ...

of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had several
ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots it's getting
kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones oughta be here tomorrow
.... which will help some . I'm moving the ones in the smallest cells first ,
they seem to be laggig and I think it might be because of limited root space
.. Even with the new pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf -
and probably the one I added above it today .
Hopefully this will be a short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st
or so I'll be able to move them into the little greenhouse I'm planning to
build onto the south side of the house . The key will be night-time temps .
I'll need to maintain minimum 40° to 45° overnight temps before I dare move
them out . Insulation may be called for ... because 65° would be much better
..
I just hope the planned 30" x 96" is going to be big enough ! Got 2 weeks
to get it built , better get off my lazy butt . Looks like I'll be getting
that head start I was looking for ... the pumpkin I planted for a germ test
is about to bloom with male flowers . SaWeeeeet !
--
Snag
80-something seedlings and growing ... c'mon Spring !
The bees are ready too ...


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Old 15-02-2015, 08:59 PM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Default Runnin' out ...

On 2/15/2015 2:48 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had several
ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots it's getting
kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones oughta be here tomorrow
... which will help some . I'm moving the ones in the smallest cells first ,
they seem to be laggig and I think it might be because of limited root space
. Even with the new pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf -
and probably the one I added above it today .
Hopefully this will be a short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st
or so I'll be able to move them into the little greenhouse I'm planning to
build onto the south side of the house .


What materials will you be using for the greenhouse Snag? Many moons ago
I built an 8X12 greenhouse from clear fiberglas corrugated sheeting and
some scrap redwood from a cooling tower. It worked for about fifteen
years until a hurricane blew through and ate it. I put in three four
foot by two tube wide fluorescent lights and ran electricity along with
a waterproof outlet. Used an electric heater made for such things to
keep it warm in the cool Louisiana winters. Even the bench down each
side and the back were made from scrap redwood. I miss that greenhouse
bu don't have room for one here.

We've still got the grow light on about six toilet paper cups that are
growing two tomato plants and a bunch of chamomile for the wife's
sleeping aid.

The key will be night-time temps .
I'll need to maintain minimum 40° to 45° overnight temps before I dare move
them out . Insulation may be called for ... because 65° would be much better
.
I just hope the planned 30" x 96" is going to be big enough ! Got 2 weeks
to get it built , better get off my lazy butt . Looks like I'll be getting
that head start I was looking for ... the pumpkin I planted for a germ test
is about to bloom with male flowers . SaWeeeeet !

I pinched off the many blossoms on the newly planted blueberries today
and harvest the last three cabbage heads. Picked the last of the green
peas and pulled those plants. Chopped all the leaves and vines up with
the battery powered weedeater. Put the stuff in a #3 galvanized tub and
went out it with the weed machine. Surprised me, it did a bang up job
and the greens went into the compost barrel, which is once again getting
full. I may have to get another one.

George, ready to plant in the raised beds within the next few weeks.
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Old 16-02-2015, 01:54 AM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Default Runnin' out ...

George Shirley wrote:
On 2/15/2015 2:48 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had
several ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots
it's getting kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones
oughta be here tomorrow ... which will help some . I'm moving the
ones in the smallest cells first , they seem to be laggig and I
think it might be because of limited root space . Even with the new
pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf - and
probably the one I added above it today . Hopefully this will be
a short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st or so I'll be able to
move them into the little greenhouse I'm
planning to build onto the south side of the house .


What materials will you be using for the greenhouse Snag?


This is more of an overgrown hot box than a green house . The back wall
will be the house , it'll be about 8 feet long , 30" deep and 24" to
30-something tall . The material I have on hand is some plywood siding
cutoffs from a construction job my neighbor worked on and some old window
sashes salvaged from another job . Hinges will be made from strips of
leather that useta cover an office chair .

--
Snag


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Old 16-02-2015, 02:23 AM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Default Runnin' out ...

On 2/15/2015 7:54 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
George Shirley wrote:
On 2/15/2015 2:48 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had
several ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots
it's getting kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones
oughta be here tomorrow ... which will help some . I'm moving the
ones in the smallest cells first , they seem to be laggig and I
think it might be because of limited root space . Even with the new
pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf - and
probably the one I added above it today . Hopefully this will be
a short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st or so I'll be able to
move them into the little greenhouse I'm
planning to build onto the south side of the house .


What materials will you be using for the greenhouse Snag?


This is more of an overgrown hot box than a green house . The back wall
will be the house , it'll be about 8 feet long , 30" deep and 24" to
30-something tall . The material I have on hand is some plywood siding
cutoffs from a construction job my neighbor worked on and some old window
sashes salvaged from another job . Hinges will be made from strips of
leather that useta cover an office chair .

Use it up then re purpose it, that's the way we do it too. I built a
"hot" box from old window sashes when we remodeled once. Unfortunately a
tornado passed through and dropped a tree on it. No other damage, I may
have insulted the seedling gods inadvertently.

Our neighbors run down to the nearest nursery or big box store to buy
pots. We use the ones that came with plants that went into the ground.
Crockery and glass break, plastic is forever. Although we do have
several old crocks that we bought at garage sales for next to nothing
since they had chips or cracks. Easy as anything to glue crockery back
together. I think we have some small pots that used to be part of the
first dinner service we bought when we married 54 years ago. I think my
wife's family motto is: "Waste not, want not."
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Old 16-02-2015, 03:05 AM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Default Runnin' out ...

In article ,
"Terry Coombs" wrote:

of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had several
ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots it's getting
kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones oughta be here tomorrow
... which will help some . I'm moving the ones in the smallest cells first ,
they seem to be laggig and I think it might be because of limited root space
. Even with the new pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf -
and probably the one I added above it today .
Hopefully this will be a short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st
or so I'll be able to move them into the little greenhouse I'm planning to
build onto the south side of the house . The key will be night-time temps .
I'll need to maintain minimum 40° to 45° overnight temps before I dare move
them out . Insulation may be called for ... because 65° would be much better


50F is really as far as you need to shoot for night-time temps. Seeds
grown "in the house" at 65F have a harder time transitioning to the
out-doors when the time comes. If you are around and will get up to move
it off not too long after sun-up, some insulation over the glass at
night will help. You can use row-cover fabric if you might not get to it
for a while in the morning - not as good insulation, but better light
transmission than a blanket, old quit, paper mill felt, bags of leaves,
etc...

--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by
Please don't feed the trolls. Killfile and ignore them so they will go away.


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Old 16-02-2015, 03:58 AM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Default Runnin' out ...

Ecnerwal wrote:
In article ,
"Terry Coombs" wrote:

of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had
several ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots
it's getting kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones
oughta be here tomorrow ... which will help some . I'm moving the
ones in the smallest cells first , they seem to be laggig and I
think it might be because of limited root space . Even with the new
pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf - and
probably the one I added above it today . Hopefully this will be a
short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st
or so I'll be able to move them into the little greenhouse I'm
planning to build onto the south side of the house . The key will be
night-time temps . I'll need to maintain minimum 40° to 45°
overnight temps before I dare move them out . Insulation may be
called for ... because 65° would be much better


50F is really as far as you need to shoot for night-time temps. Seeds
grown "in the house" at 65F have a harder time transitioning to the
out-doors when the time comes. If you are around and will get up to
move it off not too long after sun-up, some insulation over the glass
at night will help. You can use row-cover fabric if you might not get
to it for a while in the morning - not as good insulation, but better
light transmission than a blanket, old quit, paper mill felt, bags of
leaves, etc...


Part of the reason for doing this is to have the ability to harden the
plants to outdoor conditions so there won't be a shock when they go into the
garden .

--
Snag


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Old 16-02-2015, 11:55 AM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Default Runnin' out ...

On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 14:48:08 -0600, "Terry Coombs"
wrote:

of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had several
ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots it's getting
kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones oughta be here tomorrow
... which will help some . I'm moving the ones in the smallest cells first ,
they seem to be laggig and I think it might be because of limited root space
. Even with the new pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf -
and probably the one I added above it today .
Hopefully this will be a short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st
or so I'll be able to move them into the little greenhouse I'm planning to
build onto the south side of the house . The key will be night-time temps .
I'll need to maintain minimum 40° to 45° overnight temps before I dare move
them out . Insulation may be called for ... because 65° would be much better
.
I just hope the planned 30" x 96" is going to be big enough ! Got 2 weeks
to get it built , better get off my lazy butt . Looks like I'll be getting
that head start I was looking for ... the pumpkin I planted for a germ test
is about to bloom with male flowers . SaWeeeeet !


Keep a close eye on the temperatures in the greenhouse. On a sunny
day the temperatures can reach over 90°F. We have a remote thermostat
in the greenhouse and a display in the kitchen. Even with below 30°
outside temperatures it can reach that high. They did yesterday.
--
USA
North Carolina Foothills
USDA Zone 7a
To find your extension office
http://www.csrees.usda.gov/Extension/index.html
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Old 16-02-2015, 04:32 PM posted to rec.gardens.edible
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Posts: 678
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The Cook wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 14:48:08 -0600, "Terry Coombs"
wrote:

of room ! I kinda knew this was going to be a problem , and had
several ideas in mind . As I repot my seedlings into 4" round pots
it's getting kinda crowded on my window shelf . The square ones
oughta be here tomorrow ... which will help some . I'm moving the
ones in the smallest cells first , they seem to be laggig and I
think it might be because of limited root space . Even with the new
pots , I'm probably going to have to enlarge the shelf - and
probably the one I added above it today . Hopefully this will be a
short-lived problem , I think that by March 1st or so I'll be able
to move them into the little greenhouse I'm planning to build onto
the south side of the house . The key will be night-time temps .
I'll need to maintain minimum 40° to 45° overnight temps before I
dare move them out . Insulation may be called for ... because 65°
would be much better . I just hope the planned 30" x 96" is going
to be big enough ! Got 2 weeks to get it built , better get off my
lazy butt . Looks like I'll be getting that head start I was looking
for ... the pumpkin I planted for a germ test is about to bloom with
male flowers . SaWeeeeet !


Keep a close eye on the temperatures in the greenhouse. On a sunny
day the temperatures can reach over 90°F. We have a remote thermostat
in the greenhouse and a display in the kitchen. Even with below 30°
outside temperatures it can reach that high. They did yesterday.


A few months ago I bought an indoor/outdoor thermometer with an outside
probe on a wire - it'll be moved over to the hot box for monitoring purposes
.. It saves highest/lowest for whatever period you select - the only way to
reset is to pull the battery .
The sashes I will use for tops will be hinged to the wall so they can be
opened for venting when needed and so they can be left open as the plants
get hardened off . I'm considering putting an unused space heater out there
for the possibility of really cold nights ... I've already got a lot of time
invested , hate to lose my seedlings due to a lack of foresight .
--
Snag


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