- Starting a new blog about the things I like to grow,
- Noticing that the snowdrops in my garden were about to bloom,
- Planting my first seeds of 2013
My garden is full of debris and dead things which I was too lazy to clear away at the end of 2012. But through that debris, there are signs of new life. The snowdrops are pushing through - and even very nearly blooming! There are other bulbs coming through, including daffodils and crocuses. There are starlings and blackbirds clearly building nests in the large hedge between our neighbour and us. The weather may still be icy, but changes are happening. My youngest daughter turns 6 at the end of February and every year the snowdrops bloom in time for her birthday. It marked the end of a long cold winter being pregnant, back in 2007. The day the snowdrops bloomed, that is when she decided to come earth side. So the snowdrops still mean a huge burst of good feelings around here, for many, many reasons.
I haven't made lots of plans yet about what exactly I want to grow this year, but I do know that chillies and tomatoes will be part of these plans. I found that last year that both of these did very well from having a longer growing season after I started them off in February, inside. The chillies benefited from germinating in the warm, on top of the fireplace and later on the windowsill as the sun rose high enough to shine beams over the hedge and into the house.
So it made me happy today to fill a small propagator with chilli seeds, which came from last years home-grown chillies. I had hung my 2012 harvest up to dry in the Autumn and we are still using them now for cooking. Each chilli is FULL of perfectly preserved seeds, and because the chilli has been dried, I have simply cut the top off the chilli, and tipped the seeds out. The chilli can be used for cooking and the seeds can be planted :-)
2012's crop drying out, full of seeds. |
Seeds sown and being coaxed to germinate on the fireguard |
I have not yet bought tomato seeds, so I filled the other half of the propagator with coriander seeds. I have had limited success with coriander from year to year - it tends to bolt before I can make use of it. I thought I would try it early this year to see if I can get more usable leaves before the sun gets strong and convinces my coriander plants to run to seed and produce flowers instead of edible leaves!
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