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Old January 18, 2015   #31
Garf
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Ginger , it seems that you have a good headstart on me this year. Give me a month and I'll have some nice ones (hopefully).
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Old January 22, 2015   #32
Garf
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What? No more snide comments? My camera is ready to take more pics.
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Old January 22, 2015   #33
Blueaussi
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I, uh, I...well, I sorta fondle my seed packets to pass the time during the cold months.


Don't judge me!
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Old January 22, 2015   #34
JJJessee
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Yeahyeahyeah, Garf, but most of us are zone-challenged this time of year ;-)

Well I dream a lot.
I've plotted and planned out my raised beds to within an inch of their compost.
January has actually been favorable to do a little ground work so I turned cover crop in a bed last week.



Plus, yesterday I replaced the lower side of 2 25' beds. I recycle a lot of 1x4 pine that way.

Growing greens inside on the light shelves...



...keeps my seeding-finger from getting itchy.

I've also got a few peppers and all my onions underway too.

So, I guess the answer is "Diversify".
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Old January 22, 2015   #35
kurt
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"Just remember, those southerners gardens are burning up and dried out just as our are looking good. So remember to gloat in July and August. For every season there is a time."


Usually dependent on my traveling work schedule we(wife and)secure the house here(shutters,rolled down,garden cleaned up and tools put away the earlymangoes and lychees are harvested,then I pack up the dogs in the RV,drive to our farm in PA and start all over again.Usually around end of May.Then in mid August early Sept do the same in reverse.
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Old January 22, 2015   #36
shelleybean
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I'm busy enough through New Year's not to get too depressed, but after that, January and February are terrible. All I can do is plan, order, sow seed, thin seedlings, eat from my winter garden, which is pretty much greens and a few root vegetables at this point, and eat the tomatoes I canned or dried last summer. Spring will come, eventually. And when it does, there will be plenty to keep us busy.
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Old January 22, 2015   #37
FarmerShawn
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Here in the frozen north, at this time of year I order way too many seeds and gardening tools, and grow microgreens under my seedling lights, many of which have a ten-day seed-to-harvest time, so I get to replant often!
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Old January 22, 2015   #38
kayrobbins
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In some ways northern gardeners have it better. You get those cold winter months where you do not have to worry about weeds and insects. You can relax and drool over your seed catalogs and plan your next wonderful garden.

This week I have been fermenting the last batch of tomato seeds I am going to save. Two days ago I stepped up 127 tomato seedlings for the spring garden. I am growing micro tomatoes under lights. Yesterday I pulled up all but 6 of my tomato plants. July and August are not great but I usually have a few plants still producing. And I start the fall tomato seeds in late July or early August. There is no down time for a deep south tomato addict.
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