I've been diverted by succulents the past few months, but now it is time to get the greenhouse ready for our artificially-lengthened growing season. I was looking for bags of garden soil on Google last night and found a sale at Ace for 0.75-cubic foot bags, $2.50 each. Usually these are at least $4.50, so I ordered 15 and picked them up today. Monday I will pick up my cubic yard of compost and a few other supplies, then spend Tuesday doing my four different soil mixes and filling up the planters, pots, grow bags and baskets. The four mixes are:
- Strawberries and Supertunias in baskets, grow bags and pots: 45% Promix, 45% compost, 10% vermiculite.
- Greenhouse planter beds: 90% compost, 10% vermiculite, spread 2 inches on top of the existing soil.
- Most other pots and grow bags: 10% Promix, 40% garden soil, 40% compost, 10% vermiculite.
- With some pots and grow bags (potato, Cuban Oregano, thyme, and rosemary), I will use the previous mix except substitute perlite for vermiculite. Perlite has less water retention but still loosens the soil.
I calculated it all out and came up with 1 cubic yard of compost, 16 bags of soil (I already had one), and six cubic feet of Promix which I bought on sale at Walmart months ago. When I calculated how much garden soil I would need to fill up the greenhouse beds last year, I nailed it with fifty of the larger 1.5-cubic foot bags, so there's at least a slight chance that I will be in the neighborhood. I estimate I will have about five buckets of compost left over, which I will give away or eventually use.
I spread out all of the grow bags inside the greenhouse to see how much room they will actually take up in the open space on the north wall. Three of the five big 15-gallon grow bags are shown here, but only one of them will be permanently inside the greenhouse. I also have one 10-gallon, two 7-gallon, and seven 5-gallon grow bags. They will all be put to use.
With all these grow bags, I don't think I will have to buy any more big pots. If I need something, a couple of the 5-gallon buckets might get holes drilled in them. It will be crowded inside the greenhouse for more than a month, but eventually at least six of the larger pots and bags will move to our back yard. There also will be 15 hanging baskets inside until the weather warms up, then 10 of them will be moved to hooks on the outside of the greenhouse or to our house. I hope the inside of the greenhouse will be a sight to behold in late May just before everything starts moving out.
All told, I will have about 50 different plant varieties at the greenhouse and in our yard this year. That doesn't include any of the 50 varieties of succulents that may end up in the greenhouse or outside on our porches. As soon as I get the soil mixes to their intended locations, I'm going to turn the heat on in the greenhouse and start planting. With an average last frost date of June 9, that would be more than a 2-month jump on the growing season. My most-often repeated greenhouse saying is, "We will see."
March 23: I got my compost today. The guy with the Bobcat was not shy about filling up the back of my truck bed. I figure it is more than a cubic yard, so I may have way too much. On the other hand, the expensive bags of vermiculite ($10) I got at Walmart seem awfully small. I may have to adjust the mixes for more compost and less vermiculite.
On the home front, I cancelled the Garden Crossings order of Supertunias and Chick Charms Sempervivums due to travel plans in May making it uncertain whether I would be here to unbox. The Sempervivums can live in a cold, dry box for weeks, but that is not the case with tunias. I will buy Proven Winners Supertunias locally, and (after complaining about the viability of online plant orders recently) I just put in an order with Mountain Crest for Chick Charms and some other stuff on my wish list. So I will be reacting to another unboxing in about six days.
I looked over the selection at Home Depot and Walmart today, and it's not all the exact same varieties I already have but it is looking very similar. Mountain Crest has the stuff they don't. This is the order:
- Echeveria pulvinata Frosty - velvety coating.
- Echeveria Black Prince - leaves are dark burgundy, almost black.
- Haworthia retusa f. geraldii - translucent leaves bent back like thumbs.
- Kalanchoe humilis Desert Surprise - purple blotches and stripes on the leaves. My first Kalanchoe.
- Chick Charms Lotus Blossom - pink, crimson and creamy white leaves.
- Chick Charms Berry Blues - blue, pink and purple at different times.
- Chick Charms Appletini - apple green center with dark tips.
- Chick Charms Cosmic Candy - fine white cilia (fuzzy).
- Chick Charms Gold Nugget - a mix of vibrant red, hot pink, and gold tones throughout the year, the most famous of the Chick Charms line.



























