MB> MM> Well, it looks like pepper and tomatoes then! I'm starting my tomato
MB> MM> seeds this weekend so I can get them out early - is that right for
MB> MM> here?
MB>
MB> Yes it's the right time to start tomatoes and peppers. I'm ready
MB> to start mine too. I like to get those in the ground by the
MB> first of March, so I'd better get going!
The tomato seeds and empty pots have been sitting there for weeks now - I
keep promising myself I'll pot them up! This weekend for sure!
MB> I only grew snow peas once, and that was years ago, but my garden
MB> books say if you wait too long to harvest the pods you can shell
MB> them like regular peas and cook the peas. So I guess that means
MB> they're edible!
I figure if it gets hot too early, we'll have pods, if it stays cool long
enough, we'll have peas, and if gets warm way too early, at least we'll
have pretty flowers. The little seedlings are already a couple of
inches high and have true leaves. I go out to water every other day or so
and the gopher turtle watches me from his hole... I guess he can't figure
out what I'm doing!
MB> MM> blowing away. We got 30-60mph winds for about a month in the spring
MB> MM> (day after day after day of wind - ugh) - that would either blow
way
MB> MM> the good soil I'd been cultivating, or cover it with a few inches of
MB> MM> sand every year. It was depressing to garden in the desert.
MB>
MB> Wow! that sounds worse than gardening here in beach sand! I
MB> always think of Florida as being pretty windy, but guess not so
MB> bad after all.
The coastal areas are probably always breezy, but unless a hurricaine is
coming through, New Mexico has Florida beat when it comes to wind. It's the
constant day-after-day stuff that grates on your nerves... and worse, it
whips away what little humidity there is in the air, so it's hard to start
planting in the spring.
MB> MM> Oh... I have a lawn question - it looks like whatever grass is grown
MB> MM> in our neighborhood dies back every winter (ours along with everyone
MB> I'm not sure I know too much about lawns. My lawn usually
MB> pretty much stays halfway green all winter, unless we have a bad
MB> freeze. But it does usually start waking up about the time the
MB> weather begins to warm, not too long from now really, maybe by
MB> the end of the month. I think you'll have to find out what kind
MB> of grass you have though. Some of our grasses you can't start
MB> from seed, like St. Augustine. Sorry I'm not more help on that.
It's already turning back to green, but only here and there... the clover
is growing too (which I don't mind) and some pretty wildflowers right in
the middle of the lawn. Since I don't know what kind it is, I figure
I'll seed whatever I like (and what'll grow in this area) and see what
happens. Right now the crabgrass is still dormant and I'd like to keep it
that way.
Have fun, Michele
Internet: chaos@ao.net FIDO: 1:363/340
* LSD melts your mind, not in your hand.
RoseReader 2.52T P001948 Entered at [COMPLICATIONS]
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