Planting lettuce seeds
I experimented with lettuce last season, and was surprised at how easily it grew. So this year I am approaching it in a more organized way. I had originally planned to wait until I could buy little lettuce seedlings, but I hate to wait, so I planted some seeds yesterday. Lettuce gives a nice "ground cover" look which goes well with my garden. And I can eat it!
Last year, I scattered seeds all over the garden to see where they would take, and where the plants would grow. This area of The Tropical Paradise, in an east-facing area, is where they grew best last year. It may be a bit early in the season, but I am hoping that the desert will do what it always does, switch off the hot weather very quickly. And we are about a month or so away from that now. If things work out the way I want them to, the seedlings will start to poke up in a few weeks and start to become "real plants" at about the time the weather begins to cool down. Lettuce is a cool-weather crop, so it should be at its best in the winter. And I will be harvesting the leaves, that is trimming them and eating them, not digging up the whole plant, so it will provide food for a whole season.
A couple of things that I am doing different this year is to use seed-starter soil, which you can see in the photo, and I bought some non-toxic (to humans) bug spray.
I'll let you know how it goes.
I hate to wait. Have they sprouted yet?
Last year, I scattered seeds all over the garden to see where they would take, and where the plants would grow. This area of The Tropical Paradise, in an east-facing area, is where they grew best last year. It may be a bit early in the season, but I am hoping that the desert will do what it always does, switch off the hot weather very quickly. And we are about a month or so away from that now. If things work out the way I want them to, the seedlings will start to poke up in a few weeks and start to become "real plants" at about the time the weather begins to cool down. Lettuce is a cool-weather crop, so it should be at its best in the winter. And I will be harvesting the leaves, that is trimming them and eating them, not digging up the whole plant, so it will provide food for a whole season.
A couple of things that I am doing different this year is to use seed-starter soil, which you can see in the photo, and I bought some non-toxic (to humans) bug spray.
I'll let you know how it goes.
I hate to wait. Have they sprouted yet?
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