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How Green is My Garden
by Dolores DeSalvo

ARTICLE

"Some 2008 Resolutions to Consider"
Broadcast on: December 29, 2007

Hello! I hope that your Christmas was really great! Sigh! What wacky, wicked, winter weather we’ve been blessed with so far! Remember that old pink energizer bunny that keeps going, and going, and going? Well, welcome to the energizer winter that keeps snowing, and snowing, and snowing! (Or raining, and raining, and raining!)

If it doesn’t stop snowing soon, we’re going to be stuck in our cabins with a massive case of cabin fever. They may not even find us until spring! Hey - spring? Now doesn’t that sound like a wonderful word?

Hey, I know! Let’s think spring things - summer things - garden things! Well, duh - after all - it is How Green Is My Garden! Ok! Ok! So my garden isn’t green - yet! But eventually it will be. So let’s do things now to make sure that "eventually" comes a whole lot sooner.

You know - it’s almost the beginning of a New Year when everyone makes long lists of really great New Year’s resolutions. Yeah – tons of resolutions for a New Year when 99 44/100% of us have broken every single one of those New Year’s resolutions by the end of the first week! But as long as we’re thinking about New Year’s resolutions, let’s come up with a few gardening New Year’s resolutions.

RESOLUTION 1 - Let’s eat healthier by planting more veggies into our food gardens. If we always plant lettuce for our summer salads, let’s try some new stuff this year.

Let’s plant spinach, or Swiss chard, or kale, or collards for those summer salads. All of these have way more nutrition in them - more vitamins and minerals in them than in just plain old lettuce. Keep in mind, the darker green or orange a vegetable variety is, the more vitamin A in it.

Why just plain old lettuce? Try robust romaine that not only comes in deep, dark, nutritious green, but also in red or bronze. Try loose-leaf lettuce that comes in all shades of the rainbow. There are Buttercrunch, Batavian, Bibb, and Butterhead varieties. There are Cos, Crisphead, and Oakleaf. Or try other greens besides lettuce - like amaranth, arugula, chervil, chicory, cress, endive, and mustard.

RESOLUTION 2 - Experiment! Be daring! Try new varieties! Just like with the greens, there are probably things out there that you’ve never tasted before.

Do keep growing all your good, old, tried and true family favorites, but do try something strange or something new - either a new kind of vegetable that you’ve never attempted to grow before, or a new variety or flavor of your favorite veggie.

Have you ever tried to grow grape tomatoes, or striped zebra tomatoes, or heirloom tomatoes, or hollow stuffing tomatoes? What about yellow grape tomatoes, or yellow tomatoes, or yellow cherry tomatoes?

Or if you love to grow flowers every year, this time try edible ones like Bachelor buttons, calendula, dianthus, marigolds, nasturtiums, or Johnny-Jump-Ups. Gees, have your flowers and eat them too! Try it; you’ll like it, Mikey!

RESOLUTION 3 - Start garden-gabbing with your neighbors, friends, and relatives. Find out if there is a particular veggie that they are great at growing. Maybe they go crazy with carrots, or ga-ga over garlic, or do terrific tomatoes, enormous eggplants, or perfect pepper or pumpkins. Hey, maybe you grow the very best basil, beets, and broccoli for miles around!

Well, decide who does what better or best, then make plans to trade off, or barter, or share with those neighbors, friends and relatives.

RESOLUTION 4 - Seed catalogs! If you’ve got them, go through them. Check out those newly-invented varieties or those newly re-discovered, old heirloom varieties. Check out and compare the differences among all those different seed catalogs. Compare seed prices for those seed packets.
Compare the seed quantities in those packets. Compare shipping and handling costs to deliver those seed packets. If you don’t get any mail order seed catalogs - then my condolences! You don’t know what you are missing! So -

RESOLUTION 5 - Get some, or a few more, or a lot more new seed catalogs. Call for them; lots of those seed companies have free 1-800 numbers. E-mail for them; most of them are on the Internet. Or send snail mail for them; that good old 41-cent stamp goes a long way. And you know, a 26-cent postcard goes just as far to get some of those seed catalogs.

RESOLUTION 6 - Hey, there is no resolution 6 for you. Just for me! My resolution 6 - know when to quit! So that’s it for this week!

Give Cornell Cooperative Extension a call at 376-5270 if you need any seed company names and addresses.

In the meantime -
Have a safe and Happy New Year!

Remember – Eat Smart New York!

And – Bye – talk to you soon!
D

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