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Yardstead Society

354 members • Free

9 contributions to Yardstead Society
Tell me what size your dream greenhouse is?!
We’ve got another greenhouse build coming up in the next few weeks, and I’m completely torn on what size to go with. I’d love your input. What does your dream greenhouse look like? How big would you build it? And what kind of budget would you realistically want to stay within? I’m sharing my latest concept here for context. Right now I’m leaning toward a 12' x 20' design, built as a passive solar greenhouse. The goal would be to push it closer to a true 4-season growing space. Curious to hear what you'd do.
Tell me what size your dream greenhouse is?!
1 like • 1d
My dream is a sole year round green house. 12x20 sounds big but think it’s perfect for a year round. Need more space then just a couple seasons
Make Sure You do This With the Plants That You Buy!!
Hardening off is something a lot of beginners skip because nobody tells them about it, and then they wonder why the plants they bought look terrible a week after planting. Here's what's actually happening and how to do it right. When plants are grown at a nursery or greenhouse, they live in a protected environment with consistent warmth, no wind, and filtered light. It's basically a spa. Then you bring them home and put them straight in the ground, and suddenly they're dealing with direct sun, temperature swings, and wind they've never experienced. The leaves scorch, the plant wilts, and it looks like you killed it immediately. You didn't do anything wrong. It just wasn't ready. Hardening off is the process of slowly introducing your new plants to outdoor conditions over about a week so they can build up the toughness they need. You're helping them develop thicker leaf surfaces, stronger stems, and the ability to handle varying weather. Here's how to do it (and yes it is important that you do it): Day 1, set the plants outside in a shady sheltered spot for an hour or two and then bring them back in. That's it. You're just introducing them to outdoor air and temperature. Day 2, same thing but leave them out for three to four hours. Still shade, still sheltered. Day 3, start giving them a little dappled light and leave them out for about four hours. You'll notice them starting to look a little sturdier already. Day 4, they're ready for some real sun now. Morning sun is gentler than afternoon sun so position them to get that first. Leave them out for half the day. Day 5, most of the day outside with more direct sun exposure. Bring them in before evening. Day 6, out all day. At this point they should be handling it well. Day 7, leave them out overnight if temperatures are safe for that plant. After that they're ready to go in the ground. A few things that actually matter during this process. Check your plants every day because containers dry out much faster outside, especially with any wind. If a cold snap or heat wave is coming, just bring them in and pick up where you left off. And don't skip this for tomatoes or peppers. Those are the ones most likely to struggle if you rush it. Hardy annuals like marigolds or pansies are more forgiving, but the warm season vegetables really do need this transition time.
Make Sure You do This With the Plants That You Buy!!
2 likes • 10d
Never realized I needed to do that and of course didn’t read prior to planting and some are struggling. More knowledge for next year. Thanks
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 👇
1 like • 15d
We had frost a couple days ago.
1 like • 15d
@Carolynne Hill no I’m not
BIG NEWS: First Expert Session is BOOKED!
Want to learn how to grow mushrooms? We’re hosting a live session on Thursday, May 21st where we’re going to walk through everything you need to know to get started. This is the first of many expert sessions I’m bringing into the Yardstead Society. The goal here is to build something you can keep coming back to… a place where you’re constantly learning, building new skills, and expanding what you’re doing at home. This call is free to join live, but we’re capping it at 100 people. If you can’t make it live, the recording will be saved inside the paid tier and added to the vault we’re building out. Over time, this will become a full library of sessions you can trust and come back to whenever you need. Add it to your calendar and grab your spot - SAVE YOUR SEAT HERE You won’t want to miss this one ✨ Have questions you want answered during the call, drop them in the comments here!
BIG NEWS: First Expert Session is BOOKED!
2 likes • 28d
So exciting. I will be skipping since I’m highly allergic but hope it goes wonderfully
If you could build a greenhouse this year what would it look like?
I want to hear from YOU! I am in the process of planning another DIY greenhouse project and I want your intel. Tell me what your perfect greenhouse looks like. How big is it, what size? Is it a true 4 season greenhouse that you plan to grow in and heat or more of a potting shed to just extend your growing season? Have inspo photos saved? Share them here. Full disclosure, I am leaning towards a passive solar greenhouse design. I am stuck between 10x12 or 8x16 as far as size goes. Both sizes would cost close to the same to build. They are coming in at approximately $5,500 CAD. Is this something you'd want in your backyard? Would you invest $5,500 CAD ($4,000 USD) into a greenhouse if it meant you could grow in it year round? I attached photos of a mockup of a 10x12 passive solar greenhouse design I’ve been working on. I'd love to hear from you and get your input!
If you could build a greenhouse this year what would it look like?
2 likes • Apr 7
Will look forward to seeing the final pictures. I’m dreaming of a sunroom similar on house then a separate green house. Not sure budget will make that work now with the state of economy. But still hoping
2 likes • Apr 11
@Carolynne Hill exactly what I’d love to do. Can’t wait to see what you come up with
1-9 of 9
Terri McDonald
3
38points to level up
@terri-mcdonald-2631
Backyard gardener wanting to learn more to do better/more

Active 1d ago
Joined Mar 16, 2026
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