Hi All,
After browsing the forum for a while, I have a sneaky feeling I am a bit out of my league. Although I have always aspired to create a cottage garden, my attempts have been challenging. I grow most of my flowers from seed, don’t always know the botanical name for a plant, and frequently forget what I put in and where I planted it. I am a disorganized gardening aficionado, but not a pro.
I started gardening about 30 years ago, outside of Denver, Colorado. We lived at 9,000 feet above sea level and had a growing season of 90 days. I did not try a cottage garden in Denver, but concentrated on native American flowers suitable for the western part of the US. When I moved my family to Connecticut, I thought growing conditions might be more supportive. It is, after all, in New England . Unfortunately, my dreams have not materialized (yet). After many years of building flower beds in CT, I turned to growing vegetables for health reasons. The produce in American supermarkets is scary- we have no labeling for GMO crops and our food is heavily treated with pesticide. Has anyone noticed how huge our sweet peppers are, these days?
My vegetable gardening has recently expanded to permaculture and I am slowly trying to convert my back yard into an edible landscape. So far, I have a dwarf peach tree, several currants, grapes, raspberries, strawberries and filberts. All but the peach and strawberries were planted last year. Learning how to preserve my produce is, now, high on my list of things to do. Canned tomatoes just can’t rival tomatoes grown at home! Annually, I grow most of my flowers and all vegetables and herbs from seed. This is what I am hoping Ideas Genie will help me with. It’s hard to keep track of the large number of seeds I plant each year. Many are started in my basement on a small propagation pad, and moved to a large table with fluorescent lighting until I can move them outside. This is quite a long wait for tender annuals since my last expected frost date is in the middle of May! My flower beds have suffered from this new interest, but I plan to get back to them this year.
Other hobbies include digital photography, reading real books, and listening to books on CD during my 140 mile round trip commute to work. I work in IT for one of the largest casinos in the world- a Native American casino located in southeastern Connecticut- Mohegan Sun. It’s an interesting business…
Am glad to be here and hope to be able to contribute, once in a while.
Laura