Monday, March 13, 2023

Plant Snapdragon Seeds--STAT!

  It was crazy.

I woke up at the crack of dawn Sunday morning with the feeling that I needed to plant my Snapdragon seeds right now. So I got up and did it. It was such a strange thing, though. I was yawning and laughing at myself the whole time.

I haven't started any seeds yet this year so most of my gardening stuff is still out in the shed, but it was still dark out and way to cold to go outside in my jammies. I dug around a bit in the cabinets and found most of what I would need, and the potting mix was close by on the patio, thank goodness.


By 6 AM I had prepared a milk jug for planting (Winter Sowing style). Luckily, I found one last packet of Snapdragon seeds. I was so relieved to set that planted jug outside where it'll get lots of sunshine... once the sun rises, that is.

Thursday, March 9, 2023

Use Canva Mockups for Etsy Listings

Mockups Really Do Look Better 

I'm finally learning to use mockups for my Etsy shop listings. If I had  realized how much better they would look, I'd have figured out how to do it much sooner. 

I designed this Android mermaid wallpaper in honor of two little friends, Mika and Vivian. I was surprised at how few designs featured black mermaids, but now there is at least one more. 


I designed this birthday card for my pastor, who likes Bigfoot. I've actually never made a greeting card before. I had a package of greeting card paper and envelopes that I bought in the 1990s and never even opened until now. I designed this in Canva and it was pretty easy, really. Figuring out how to get it to print correctly was a bit tricky, though.

I purchased this mockup for greeting cards from Etsy, but I found the other mockups on Canva (a free graphic design app).









Here is the inside of the card: 
This dragon was one of my first graphic designs. It is a layered design intended for use with HTV iron-on vinyl.  I originally created it in Cricut Design Space (the required software for Cricut cutting machines) but that app does not allow you to get your designs out again. Since I wanted to add this to my Etsy shop I ended up recreating it in Canva then using Inkscape (a free vector graphics app) to tweak it and turn it into an SVG file that would allow purchasers to import it into Design Space. It sure was the long way around to do things. 

How to create a mockup for Etsy shop listings

Using a mockup in Canva is not difficult.

For Etsy, you want images at least 2000px wide, so begin with a 2000x2000px blank document in Canva. 

Click on the Elements menu at the left and type mockups in the search bar. Choose a mockup you like and click to add it to your document. 

Right click on the mockup in your document and click to set it as the background.

Now just add the design you want on the mockup. Resize your design until it looks good on the mockup.

Share/download the document as a JPG file which you can then use in your Etsy shop listings.




Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Grafting: A Gardener's Insight on Romans 11:17-24 

Rom 11:17  But if some of the branches were broken off, and you, being a wild olive, were grafted in among them and became partaker with them of the rich root of the olive tree,

Rom 11:18  do not be arrogant toward the branches; but if you are arrogant, remember that it is not you who supports the root, but the root supports you.

Rom 11:19  You will say then, "Branches were broken off so that I might be grafted in."

Rom 11:20  Quite right, they were broken off for their unbelief, but you stand by your faith. Do not be conceited, but fear;

Rom 11:21  for if God did not spare the natural branches, He will not spare you, either.

Rom 11:22  Behold then the kindness and severity of God; to those who fell, severity, but to you, God's kindness, if you continue in His kindness; otherwise you also will be cut off.

Rom 11:23  And they also, if they do not continue in their unbelief, will be grafted in, for God is able to graft them in again.

Rom 11:24  For if you were cut off from what is by nature a wild olive tree, and were grafted contrary to nature into a cultivated olive tree, how much more will these who are the natural branches be grafted into their own olive tree?


In this section of Romans 11, Paul references two methods for grafting trees that would have entirely different outcomes. One method involves cutting off the entire stem above the root ball and grafting on a new stem of a different variety. The second method involves pruning off a branch near the stem and grafting a new branch onto the cut end.

The purpose of grafting fruit trees is to have the favored rootstock support a variety that produces different fruit. Grafting might be necessary because with its own roots the new variety would be weak, more prone to disease, or not suited to the environment. Or, as in this case, simply because the gardener wants to replace non-producing branches on his favorite tree.

Paul's readers would have understood this grafting analogy very well. Israel was not cut off entirely, only the unproductive branches (Rom_11:20). The Gentiles did not replace the Jews, they were added in among the producing branches. They were to co-exist with the Jews, sharing the nourishment from the established roots. (Rom_11:17)

Thursday, February 16, 2023

I've just begun reading Order from Chaos by Jacklyn Paul. When I came across this paragraph, I shouted, "Yes! Exactly."


There's a difference between making things easy and making things possible. [snip] As my husband puts it, "medication gives you a choice where you didn't have one before. You're still responsible for making the right choice." [snip] [Meds] don't do the work for us. They only make the work as easy or hard as it is for everyone else.



Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Making Apple Crumble with my Lodi Apples


I'm a much better gardener than I am a cook! I tried to make Apple Crumble today with my very own Lodi summer apples, but I mixed up the steps in the recipe. I accidentally added the flour and chopped pecans that were supposed to be for the topping into the apple slices instead.

I didn't want to peel, core and chop more apples, so I put the apples/pecan/flour mix into a strainer and rinsed with water to get the flour off. Then I picked out as many of the pecan pieces as I could without going too crazy. I like pecans so the remaining pecan pieces in with the apples will probably be fine. I've never had apple crumble before! This is going to be so good. :) 

I used this recipe from Delish.com: 

Sunday, August 7, 2022

Building a Permaculture Fruit Tree Guild


It Began in the Summer of 2018...



Before I moved to this home in Colorado Springs, the yard had been constantly walked over, driven on, and even parked on, so it was very, very compressed. A few years back, I had made a lazy girl's compost pile in the middle there, and a flower border along the driveway.


When I decided to make more flower beds in 2018, I first had to remove the layer of weeds that had surrounded the compost pile. I also discarded the un-decomposed layer of garden debris from the top of the compost pile. Then I turned the dirt over with a shovel and spread out and mixed in the compost that had been created over the years...






I took a trip to my sister's home in Florissant and collected piles of rocks that I brought back to use as borders around the garden and paths.

I used rocks to mark out the flower beds and the pathways, then I dug the path areas down a bit so they would hold water better. (As I went, I tossed the dirt I dug from the paths onto the new garden bed.) 




I hauled in bags and bags of mulch for the paths. The sandy gravel in the new garden contained almost no organic matter, so I mixed in several bags of my favorite soil amendment, Sheep & Peat compost mix, which I get from Home Depot.





I bought a plum tree, so I decided to enlarge the garden area even more and to make it into a permaculture fruit tree guild. I planted my tree, removed more weeds, mixed in more Sheep & Peat compost mix and added more mulch. Then I was finally ready to start planting...





Unfortunately, it was almost October of 2018 by the time I finished all this. Most of the planting would have to wait until Spring.



In the meantime, I'd had to content myself with planting some pansies, daffodil bulbs and a couple of small evergreen trees.










Photos from 2019

June 2019
By June of 2019 I had planted oregano, garlic, sage, chives, dill, wormwood, comfrey,  echinacea, feverfew, chamomile, nasturtium, tomato 'patio princess', melon 'tigger', melon 'MN midget', and pumpkin 'neon'.

The wormwood was not happy and died by the next year.














By July I had expanded the garden even more and had made several sub-irrigated planters. The tomatoes absolutely loved these planters.



By August everything was really taking off. By this time I had added Goji berry, sweet William, calendula, a few turtle bean plants, and a pretty ground cover. A larkspur volunteer popped up, too.

Monday, July 25, 2022

How I Winter Sow Seeds for My Next Summer's Garden

Preparing one-gallon plastic jugs


Using a drill, hammer and nail, or soldering iron make holes in the bottom of the jug for drainage. You can also use a small screwdriver heated on your stove burner to melt the holes, but the fumes aren’t healthy.







Using a sharp knife or scissors, cut the jug almost all the way around just below the level of the handle. You want to leave a ‘hinge’ of plastic to hold everything together.


Alternatively, you can cut 3 sides of a square opening leaving a top flap. With this method, you won't need to tape the opening shut. Just push the flap back down.




Planting the seeds

Add about 1 inch of potting mix and sprinkle your seeds on top. Cover with more potting mix to the planting depth specified on the seed package. (Some seeds, such as Snapdragons, need light to germinate, so don’t cover that type with potting mix at all.) Don't water the potting mix now since we don't want the seeds to sprout until Spring.

Place a label or tag inside the jug so you know what you planted. This is important because labels on the outside will fade completely from the sunlight, and you won't be able to read them.

Close and tape the jug with duct tape. If desired, label the jug on the outside with more duct tape and a permanent marker, or you can write directly on the jug.


After the Winter Equinox (December 21), Place Jugs Outside


Place the jugs outside. Be sure to leave the caps off the jugs, otherwise on sunny days, even in cold weather, it can get too hot inside the jug, and also so that rain and snow can enter. During the coldest part of winter, it is not necessary to water the jugs because the seeds will not sprout yet.



I am in zone 5, so in early March, I move my jugs to a plastic swimming pool so that I can easily water them by adding an inch or two of water to the pool. The potting mix will soak up what moisture is needed through the drainage holes without disturbing the seeds.


At the perfect time for each type of seed, the seedlings will emerge. Water as often as needed when there is no rain. Once the weather is warm enough, the seedlings are big enough, and the garden soil is not too wet, transplant into your garden.


If the weather has gotten very warm before I get around to transplanting, I open the jugs so that the seedlings don't overheat and die. The jugs create a greenhouse effect so that sunlight--even on cool days--can make it very warm for the plants.


If the seedlings are very crowded in the jugs, I will sometimes transplant them to separate containers and place them in my greenhouse until they get large enough--and the weather gets warm enough--to plant them in the garden.


This is my method of winter sowing—there are many other ways.

For more information visit www.wintersown.org
There is also a very helpful Facebook group: www.facebook.com/groups/wintersown/

Saturday, June 19, 2021

Pruning My Mature Crabapple Trees


Over the last few days, I have pruned off tons of dead branches from my crabapple trees. Whew! I'm proud of myself, and the trees look so much better, but I hope I didn't cause too much harm.

Here is a photo from April, just after we moved in.





(Photo from May.)

I put Jobes fertilizer stakes around them last week, so hopefully that will help them recover. (There is still one large dead branch on the right side of the right tree, but my arm just can't handle any more sawing for a while.)

Here is how they look now.

Thursday, June 17, 2021

A tale of good Samaritans


Yesterday, I got a huge load of mulch delivered by RockyTop Resources to my backyard fence. I was working to shovel it into my yard when a kind neighbor from across the road saw me and came over with 3 of his young nephews to help out.







I was so grateful because I had definitely underestimated how long it would take me to do by myself. I had shoveled for over an hour, and the pile was still over my head. The 4 of them moved that remaining mountain of mulch in a little over an hour. 

 (This photo was taken after they were more than halfway done.)




I sent them home with my gratitude... and some Dominos pizzas and cold drinks.  



Friday, June 4, 2021

Removing Big Shrubs to Make a Flower Bed

 

When I moved to my new home in March 2021, there were large Forsythia and Lilac bushes planted under the front windows. They had been incorrectly pruned so they didn't even bloom.











As I added mulch under the bushes, I found there were 3 lonely Columbines planted there.









I (incorrectly) thought that if I just chopped the bushes really low, they would die out and I could turn the area into a flower bed.



Using small pruners and a hand saw, I eventually got all four bushes cut down to stumps. I mixed compost into the soil and covered the dirt with mulch. I planned to just start planting around the stumps.

I couldn't wait to get going!

I thought this would be a shady bed, so I started with Foxglove, Coral Bells (Heuchera) and some Violas for immediate color.


I planted a small circle of Snap Dragon seeds. Snap Dragons do really well here in Zone 5--they bloom from early Spring to early Winter. They are annuals, but they self-seed very easily.





Unfortunately, the shrubs did not die so I had to dig them out later while trying not to harm the things I had already planted. It was a struggle getting those large stumps and root balls dug out. I could barely lift them!



(You can see the stumps along the fence at the top right of the photo.)



I planted Foxglove and violas where the first stump had been. I also moved one of the Columbine plants. That turned out to be a mistake. I didn't know that Columbines really resent being moved so it almost died.



I always cut the flowers off plants before transplanting so they can focus on building strong roots right away.




I mixed in more compost and spread more mulch where the other 3 stumps had been.


By this time, I had noticed that the right half of this bed gets a lot more sun, so rather than shade-loving plants, I planted annual Gaillardia and Black-Eyed Susans that I had grown from seed.


I know I'll be adding more plants very soon...