Your spring garden
Here’s what can be planted – or re-planted - now and moving into early April as found in Home Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky, published
by the University of Kentucky Extension Service and the UK College of
Agriculture.
Now: spinach, radishes, peas, snow peas,
onion sets, collards, radishes, rhubarb crowns, rutabaga, turnips, asparagus,
beets, Irish potatoes, carrots, chard, kale, kohlrabi, onion seeds, parsley,
parsnips, cabbage, leaf lettuce, lettuce head plants, Bibb lettuce plants,
onion plants.
After April 5: broccoli plants, Brussels sprouts
plants, cauliflower plants, celery
Everything listed, and there’s a lot listed, loves it when
it’s cool - both soil and air – and tends to get a little surly when hot
weather arrives. Note the operative word is “cool,” not freezing cold like
we’ve just endured.
Caution: Don’t plant if the ground is wet,
no matter the phase or sign.
Moon moves to light phase; three
aspects of planting
Greetings, fellow gardeners! Spring has been here for
officially almost a week and hopefully the weather will stabilize and we can
get some planting done in those early gardens – or after the disastrous cold
snap perhaps even some replanting!
Before we begin, let me remind you
that the size of your garden makes no difference. It can be a commercial garden
or a few tomato plants or herbs in barrels. Everything can benefit from
utilizing good gardening methods and simply enhancing those by planting in the
proper phase of the moon and sign of the zodiac.
A friend told me recently she is glad
I’m back in the paper. “I don’t read your column and I don’t garden but I’m glad
you’re back,” she said. She then admitted to putting out some tomato plants.
I told her she could plant them
according the phases and signs and expect a better yield. And that’s what I’m
here to tell you – along with some other information from time to time.
Today I will first give you this
week’s information followed by a discussion about the three phases of planting:
seeding in flats or peat pots, moving seedlings to peat pots if seeded in flats,
and finally planting the seedlings in the garden.
Phases and signs
The moon is in the dark phase until 10:57 p.m. today when the
new, or light moon, comes into force. Today is a “don’t-plant-a-thing-anywhere
day” since the killing sign Aries (head) is in force, even though the moon is
in the dark phase.
Beginning Tuesday, it’s above-ground
producers until the full moon at 2:08 a.m. on April 11.
And, of course, anything you plant
outside in the unprotected garden needs to be from the list above.
A
look at the signs reveals that the killing sign Aries continues in force on
Tuesday but then it’s back to great planting for above-ground producers for
Wednesday and Thursday with the sign in Taurus (the neck), one of the most
fertile signs.
March ends and April begins with
Gemini (the arms) in force on March 31 and April 1 and the moon, of course, in
the light phase. It’s too early for bush or pole green beans but these would be
great days for peas, either a first planting or to replace any lost in the
freezes.
Looking ahead, the very fertile sign
Cancer (the breast) rules next Sunday and Monday, April 2-3. These are perfect
days for any of the above-ground producers off the list in the outdoor garden.
Then it’s back to no planting anywhere
with Leo (the heart) ruling April 4-6. Leo and Aries are the killing signs.
Elements of planting
I wrote about this a few weeks back,
but a reader’s question caused me to think maybe I didn’t make myself perfectly
clear – if that is ever possible in print!
Her question was, and I paraphrase: “Is
it okay to plant seeds in flats on Ember Days?”
First, it’s not okay to plant anything
anywhere on Ember Days!
I assumed from the question she had done some seeding on the
Ember Days in March and was looking for absolution, which I could not give. I
told her the seeds would germinate and grow, they just won’t be nearly as
productive having been planted on an Ember Day.
And that leads me to review: Assuming
you aren’t saving your own seed from year to year, there are three elements to
growing transplants for your garden.
They are: 1) seeding in flats or peat pots; 2) transplanting
to peat pots – you eliminate the first step here by just planting in peat pots
in the first place; 3) and transplanting to the garden.
As simply as I can say it, the best
scenario is to complete each step based on: 1) where what you eat grows; 2) in the right phase of the moon and 3)
in a fertile sign of the zodiac preferably (I tell you that every week), but
definitely not a killing sign, Aires or Leo, or on an Ember Day.
Here’s an example: If what you are going to eat
develops above the ground – like broccoli – then from seed flat to garden, all
the steps, are ideally accomplished with the light moon is in force (new moon
to full moon) during a fertile sign.
Some veggies are just best seeded directly into the garden,
like beans. That’s accomplished during the light phase of the moon because
beans produce above ground and when
the sign is in Gemini (the arms), the bean sign, after all danger of frost has
passed.
Most root crops – potatoes, radishes, onions, etc. – are
planted directly into the garden. If, however, you are raising transplants
then: dark moon/fertile sign.
Another example: If you are growing your own tomato
plants from seeds: light phase of the moon/fertile sign – seeding, peat pot and
transplant after all danger of frost has passed.
Plug into that formula whatever your chosen veggie and you
will know when to do what. It all begins with the simple question: Where does
what I’m going to eat grow?
If you have questions or need more clarification, here’s how
to reach me.
Wow I just saw that the moon changed signs. I am glad I didn't transplant tonight.
ReplyDeleteOh by the way the Cancer sign doesn't go in till 12.27 PM on the 2nd. The sign is still in Gemini until that time.
ReplyDeletethanks so much for this blog!! thanks for also explaining why and not just telling information to us.
ReplyDeleteI will avidly read all your posts this season!