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Yardstead Society

328 members • Free

2 contributions to Yardstead Society
Before you go to the greenhouse this weekend, read this 👇
Every spring I walk around many greenhouses and I always see things for sale that make me go... why is this here. People leave with a cart full of things that were never going to make it, or could have cost them $2 in seeds instead of $40 in starts. Here's what you need to know before going shopping this year... Lots of things can be very easily started from seed. Save yourself a ton of money and don't buy the starts. The following plants are either too easy not to start yourself or too fussy about transplanting to be worth buying as starts... GROW FROM SEED, DON'T BUY AT THE GREENHOUSE: Carrots, beets, radishes, parsnips -- direct sow, can't be transplanted, they grow a taproot the second they germinate and moving them kills them. Peas and beans -- fast from seed, go in cold ground, hate having roots disturbed. Cucumbers -- I've tried starting these and they die every time. Direct sow and they catch up fast. Squash and zucchini -- usually root bound by the time you buy them and seeds catch right up. Spinach, lettuce, arugula -- cold tolerant, germinates fast, pennies from seed. Do not buy!!! Nasturtiums, zinnias, cosmos, sunflowers -- please do not spend $4 per plant on any of these. Scratch them in the dirt and walk away. Dill and cilantro -- these bolt almost immediately after transplanting. Scatter seeds where you want them, they'll self seed forever once established. WORTH BUYING AT THE GREENHOUSE: Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant -- long indoor start time, buy these unless you have a good setup. Onion sets and leek starts -- long season crop, totally reasonable to buy. Pumpkins -- I personally have a hard time starting these from seed so I buy starts every year. No shame in it. True perennials rated for your zone -- rhubarb, chives, coneflowers, yarrow. These pay for themselves over time. THE PERENNIAL TRAP This is the one that costs people the most money. A plant is only a perennial if it survives YOUR winter. Not in general. It has to survive in your zone.
Before you go to the greenhouse this weekend, read this 👇
2 likes • 1d
What a helpful post! My favorite you’ve made!!
Where are you joining us from?!
As the community continues to grow I'd love to hear where you are all from! I'll go first. I am from Northern Alberta and located in growing zone 3. It just snowed another 6 inches last night and I am, for lack of better words, OVER IT. I am just about 8 weeks away from my last frost date, so this week I have to set aside some time to start tomatoes among other things. For some reason, seed starting is my least favourite part of the gardening process. Probably because what I love about gardening is being OUTSIDE. But... as I mentioned... 6" of fresh snow on the ground... on top of the 3ft we already had... So I guess I'll be starting seeds in my basement. Would love to hear where you are from and what you got on the go right now!
Where are you joining us from?!
2 likes • 17d
@Carolynne Hill I haven’t done that yet-using the bootstrap farmer 4/6 cells mostly this year. I should definitely though after seeing some of your stories and info, thanks for sharing. I’m so impressed how big your peppers and other plants can grow with over 200 on a tray, in tiny blocks! Do you fertilize or use a special type of soil? I have a high quality potting mix, but haven’t fertilized yet.
1 like • 16d
@Carolynne Hill love it. I still don’t understand how they can keep growing in those tiny soil blocks! Do you up-pot tomatoes? Def trying next year. I think the fish fertilizer must help a lot, I need to pick some up. Thanks for your info on soil and fertilizer. We got our first grow lights just pink lights from Amazon rated well, hoping they work good! So far I think so.
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Natasha L
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@natasha-l-5911
Sask canada

Active 1d ago
Joined Mar 16, 2026
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