I have started moving trays out to the cold frame. The Waiting Place. In a cooler, less lighted environment, their growth will slow and they will have to hang out there until better weather comes.
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| Marigolds |
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| Zinnias |
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| wunderground.com |
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| Peppers |
My diary of gardening in Western New York
I have started moving trays out to the cold frame. The Waiting Place. In a cooler, less lighted environment, their growth will slow and they will have to hang out there until better weather comes.
![]() |
| Marigolds |
![]() |
| Zinnias |
![]() |
| wunderground.com |
![]() |
| Peppers |
Every year I treat myself to one Proven Winners combo that has to be mail ordered because I can’t find the exact plants locally. I always use Romence Gardens for this.
This year I chose the Proven Winners recipe Pixie Powder.
First, here is the good news. Baby plants safe and sound.
This is what a Romence Gardens shipment usually looks like when it arrives. Cleverly designed and beautifully packed.
And this is what I got today. FedEx apparently dropped it upside down. HARD.
Out of six plants, that was the only one still in its pot. I already had planned to put them under a grow light for a few weeks, and I have been transplanting today so I had soil all ready to go. I put the gloves on because I already scrubbed my fingernails for dinner once today…
The Euphorbia was pretty much unfazed. The Begonias were filthy, but appear to be recent transplants so the little plugs apparently popped out of their pots and hid in a corner and so were unscathed. The Impatiens had large root balls and were totally smooshed, but only one side stem was actually broken. I fully expected them to be broken at the base,
And here I was really only worried about the super early ship date and the cold snap we’ve been having.
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| Peppers |
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| Coleus Cuttings |
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| Marigolds |
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| Zinnias (and two White Sage plants) |
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| Tomato Plants |
The Northern Spy Apple trees are just covered with blossoms ready to burst open.
This time last year we were already done with edging and mulching. This year we are just getting started. The weeding and clean up is already done but we just started edging and refreshing the mulch.
We have a high today of only 35F. The wind is pretty bitter, This morning, the temperature in the garden was 32F and there was a dusting of snow on the roof tops. In preparation for two cold days, I had replaced the shade cloth with a heavy frost cover on top of the insect netting yesterday. This Supreme Frost Cover is supposed to give you 6 to 8 degrees of warmth which is plenty for Cole Crops. I had already begun lifting the sides of the shade cloth and this frost cover blocks 50% of light, so it handles all of the crucial elements of the hardening off process.
It amazes me that I can walk out the door with no "To Do List" and still get many things accomplished. All I have to do is sit down in a chair overlooking the garden and things that need to be done present themselves. The first row of peas are up. I planted the third row yesterday morning.
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| Sweet Potato Slips, Zinnias and Volunteer Petunias below |