If you are WS'ing....what are you sowing this year? I just moved to our new home and I'm basically starting all over, so I'm sowing like crazy!

applestar wrote:Bramble oak, do you sow in containers placed inside tubs with drain holes drilled in them? Just for starting seedlings?
I wanted to try this tech this year and had two tubs that I was going to drill holes in... Out on the patio, forgotten. they are currently covered under 6 inches of snow!![]()
I hadn't decided on what to sow. maybe I should combine with soil's idea and sow my early spring cold weather vegs. What are the plants most suited to this method?
OpenSource wrote:Winter sowing is easy, can sew most anything this way.
I haven't tried tobacco or peppers with this method.
applestar, this may answer your questions.
https://www.wintersown.org/wseo1/Seed_Lists.html
soil wrote:just to throw this out there, wintersowing is a great time to toss out some seedballs and let nature do its thing. I tossed out about 1500 seedballs this fall and a few of the early growers have started( lettuce, spinach, chard, beet, broccoli, kale(s))
rane_grow wrote:I would also like to know what seedballs are ?
Jan , have you wintersowed rudbeckia before ? this is my first year wintersowing them and I'm hoping to have better luck with them than when I tried to direct sow them last year . This is my first year wintersowing hostas too ... I hope I have baby hostas soon
Iris
Chaesman wrote:I just started some cauliflower and cabage today according to the chart I have for this area I should be putting them out around the first week of march. My question is the last frost normally occures around the first week of april for us. will this harm the plants? also if not will broccoli also fair well being put out around this time? Just wondering if I should get some of it started as well
Thanks
From the same dandello.netAdditional points to consider:
Elevation - higher elevations are generally colder than low-lying areas and prevailing winds and microclimes can alter this even further.
Proximity to water - especially large bodies of water - can alter the local climate. Notice that Seattle on Puget Sound, has her last frost three weeks earlier and first frost three weeks later than Olympia, further south but also further inland.
Length of day - Traditionally, Northwesterners have turned to Great Britain for garden guidance as the cool, wet Maritime Northwest climate bears some similarity to that of those islands. However, in terms of gardening, the Maritime Northwest is closer to France (Washington and Oregon both grow French grapes quite well.) - Paris is at latitude 48N50. Seattle is south of Paris at 47N37, and Portland is at 45N31. Latitude determines length of day and length of day determines how much sunlight is available - despite the clouds, Seattle and Portland have more available sunlight in winter than London, or even Paris. In summer, the lower latitudes have shorter days than the higher latitudes (remember the 24 hour days at the poles?), but this is more than made up for by the longer winter days. Research has shown that the minimum number of daylight hours needed for successful fall/winter growing is ten hours. Less than that the plants go dormant - this does not mean they cannot be harvested, they simply don't put on new growth.
This also means that with relatively simple season extending techniques (I.e., cold frames, row covers) to protect the plants from adverse temperatures, vegetable harvests in the Northwest can be year-round with little difficulty. To find out when the daylight in you area drops below the necessary ten hours per day, check out USNO data services and look up your city.(Where I'm at, my garden gets less than 10 hours per day between November 3rd and February 7th.)
Transplants are typically more cold sensitive than when the same plant is directly seeded into the garden. (In my garden, lettuce has been known to sprout from seed in late February.) Transplants should be set out into the garden after all danger of frost has past or hot caps or other protective devices can be used to shelter these tender transplants from the stresses of cold weather.
I never read the disclaimer they allways seem to fall around the same level as a softwares EULA.. gotta be more carefullDoubleDogFarm wrote:chaesman,
You also need to read the disclaimer.![]()
sheeshshe wrote:OK, so this sounds like fun! so if I'm understanding correctly, I should sow all my perennials and annuals this way? perhaps sow the veggies indoors and then move outside like I normally do?
so, in zone 4, when do you think they'll approximately sprout?