I have been incredibly impatient in my acquisition of the plants that will go into the greenhouse this season. I started ordering seeds and plants in December, and started some seeds not long afterward. I just didn't believe the local garden centers would have what I wanted to plant at the appropriate time of year, early April, in other words NOW.
Seed starting has been a lot of time and effort. Some things have worked, some have not. I have tried coleus and basil multiple times and got the seeds to sprout, but they never thrived. Now I'm trying to start seeds on a heat mat in the greenhouse, coleus and basil included. I'm hoping natural sunlight gets them past the sprout stage.
I have acquired a lot of succulents this winter, and I wonder three weeks into spring when some of them are going to start, you know, growing. The four Sempervivums that survived the February freeze are turning a little bit greener, but they haven't gotten any bigger. They are sitting in the greenhouse and I gave them a good watering recently, so they should be getting the full effect of longer days.
Not all of the garden centers in the Billings area are open yet, but I took a trip today anyway to find what I could find. I started at Gainan's just to see where they were on the Supertunia front. I wasn't going to buy any because I'm getting my Proven Winners Direct shipment tomorrow. (Yay!) The expense of plants at Gainan's is one reason I don't place confidence in the local retailers. I didn't see Supertunia individual pots or in baskets, but they did have baskets with calibrachoas which I believe were Proven Winners. There were two price points for the baskets, $90 and $140. They were the same size, so I guess the difference was the plant selection. When I saw those prices I became more secure in my plan to order Supertunias from Michigan and make my own baskets.
As I have said before, it drives me nuts that Gainan's and others have nice-looking succulents and don't bother to have ID tags on most of them. But I did spot a four-stemmed succulent in a 3" pot that I am fairly sure is a Graptopetalum paraguayense 'Ghost' or something closely related. My order from Succulents Depot includes several sedums that I want to put in hanging pots, and I think this long-stemmed, branching 'Ghost' (or whatever it is) will be a good addition to the pots. I thought it reasonably priced at $6 even if the ID was just a semi-educated guess. The cashier, apparently not believing that anyone could get out of Gainan's for only $6, tried to charge me $12. I convinced her of the error of her ways and got it for the correct price. It is shown in this snapshot with a small Home Depot variety bowl I acquired a few hours later.
The Home Depot bowl was back to its regular price of $8, versus the $6 for the one I got on sale a couple weeks ago. I picked this one mainly for the Crassula on the left in the image, which I believe is Gollum. There's also a dark Echeveria (probably) and several thick-leaved somethings, but the impulse purchase was based on the Gollum. It resembles the Crassula Ogre Ears I got in the previous Home Depot bowl, but there are enough differences that I'm confident in the ID. I'll pot up the Gollum and distribute the unknowns to different bowls.
Walmart and Lowe's also had some variety bowls, but Walmart's were rather sad-looking and Lowe's were $14. There was an interesting-looking dark sedum at Lowe's, but it had bits of white fuzz on it. I don't know if I have ever seen a mealybug, but maybe I did today at Lowe's. I have enough aphids; I don't need a new pest.
Also at Home Depot, I got this Sempervivum calcareum. It is a fairly standard burgundy-tipped species, but the reason I got it is there are seven offsets forming. From what I can tell, in the calcareum species there is this variety that doesn't have an additional name, and about a dozen named varieties. When I potted it up and put it on the shelf next to the winter survivors, that's when I really noticed that the others have not grown this spring.
My final garden center stop was Nana's Bloomers near Laurel, MT. We've been driving past it on our way to Billings for years and never went in. During my recent plant acquisition activities, it was closed for the season. It opened a few days ago, and my reaction to finally going inside was "Whoa!" One of the first things I saw was tables and tables of coleus. As I said, I've been having trouble starting them from seed. I included a $12 coleus in my Proven Winners Direct order just so I would have ONE as I'm trying to get more to grow. Nana's was selling them for $7. In a different building they had four-packs of smaller coleus. There weren't quite as many varieties and I'm not sure of the price.
In the same greenhouse as the bigger coleus, they had a very small table devoted to succulents. Alas, most of them were not tagged, but they had about six very nice plants that were easy to identify as Echeveria 'Topsy Turvy,' $7 for a 4-inch pot. 'Topsy Turvy' was the centerpiece of the the Succulents Depot order which will ship any day now (I hope). I ordered two for $4.15 each, but they are smaller than what I saw today. (One of Nana's pots had two medium-sized plants instead of one big one.) Maybe that is a wash. But then there were the succulents that did have ID tags, the Sempervivum Chick Charms, $7 each. I paid about $12 each for two individual pots at Mountain Crest. I saved a bit by getting the trio ('Cosmic Candy, Gold Nugget, Appletini) for $14, but Nana's had about eight 'Cosmic Candy' pots that were 10 times better than what I potted up this week after splitting up the trio. They had several 'Gold Nugget' pots that were a bit better than what I ended up with after the split. To add to my collection, I decided to get a 'Powdered Pastry' because I have grown partial to Semps that have webbing and/or lots of cilia. And, like the calcareum, it has a lot of offsets.
If I had known Nana had 'Topsy Turvy' and these Semps, if I had been more patient, my online ordering history would be different. From what I saw in the other buildings at Nana's, my seed starting history also would be different. I just planted seed-starter 6-cells with alyssum, coleus, marigold, marjoram, tomatoes, stevia, basil and broccoli. I could have gotten all of these already ready to plant (except maybe the stevia) today at Nana's. Their coleus look great; my previous attempts have topped out at a 1/4 inch. As a plant propagator, I'm having an existential crisis. We are barely into this season, and already I'm sure there will be a lot fewer seed starting attempts in the garage next winter and a lot more money spent at Nana's next April. I also learned yesterday when visiting Nana's that there is no need to travel the extra 18 miles to Gainan's.
Nana's had some Proven Winners varieties, but no Supertunias that I could find. They did have the competing Wave petunias. It's just trivia at this point pending receipt of my order tomorrow, but it would be nice to know for next year if they carry Supertunias. I'll visit at least once more in a few weeks even if I don't really need anything, and contrary to my usual demeanor I might even ask questions. I'm thinking my propagating next winter will include Supertunia cuttings, the usual Cuban Oregano, aloe, and rosemary, and not much else. I'll need the room for my exploding succulent collection, most of which will not overwinter in the greenhouse.
With my trip today, all I managed to do in the greenhouse was pot up the two Semps and water everything. Except the Semps. They weren't real dried out like some of the online orders I get, so I'll give them a few days.

































