This is me slowly dialing in an intuitive understanding of planting and growing from absolutely no money spent. There are Jalapeños, three tomatoes in pots - experiments, and a pot of green onions.

These were just quick and dirty affairs of tossing the refuse from some Pico de Gallo in an empty egg carton and watering it daily. I transferred the individual egg carton pods into the most lazy of mulch and dirt from another dead plant. I didn’t even remove the plants from the cardboard carton because the roots were breaking through and embedded when I tried with one.

So I was curious how the tomatoes might battle it out in a plant-diator death match style, or at least that is what it has turned into. The right most pot is struggling the most with something like 4 egg carton pods that each consisted of a chunk of tomato guts and whatever seeds that included. The pot on the back with tomato plants and several blooms is only two pods. The black plastic pot is an anomaly. I also had planted a couple of egg carton pods of habanero peppers that never sprouted. Somehow I had a single tomato seed make its way inside and I just went with it. It sprouted later than the rest, and appears to be doing the best. I’m sure someone will be like ‘duh, everyone knows to grow single plants in pots’ but have you ever really tried it.

Here in SoCal, I have a little green caterpillars plague to contend with. I find leaves half chewed and the culprits underneath nearly daily. I could spray them, but the routine of hunting them ensures I get out and water the lot of them.

You can’t really see it, but there is aluminium foil with a paper towel and a bunch of green beans drying outside of their pods. These are for a future experiment between those that were dried in pods versus dried out of pods versus fresh de-/pods and likely a mix of larger and smaller beans too just to get an intuitive understanding of how each option seems to grow.

The green onions were a series of three bunches over the last 6 months that went unused and appeared ruined and ready for the trash bin. I planted them anyways and they are by-far the easiest, most useful, and productive thing I have grown. If there is one thing to have on a window seal for food use and a little color in a drab pad, this is it, do green onions.

  • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Just some notes on this.

    • many varieties of fruits/veg are not “true to seed”, or in other words, the seeds when grown up don’t produce the same thing. This is famously the case for apples, where growing the seed from a honeycrisp, e.g., will likely result in a completely different variety. Tomatoes are weird cause some are like that (like hybrid tomatoes), while others like heirloom tomatoes can be open pollinated, and therefore “stable” and true to seed.
    • peppers, especially spicy peppers for some reason, can be tricky to germinate, and especially early on, they can be slow to grow. I think part of this is due to the fact that naturally, peppers are perennial, but we grow them as annual. You might be able to keep yours going year round where you live, or at the very least, you could overwinter them, and get a huge boost on next year. You can help seeds germinate by soaking them for a day in water before planting, and I’ve heard that it may be beneficial to nick the seed before you do
    • j4k3@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 month ago

      Exploring seed variations for food variety sounds like the kind of grassroots sociopoliti-bio-hacker rebellion I would join to battle the monoculture authorities and their reproducible recipe consumerism empire. Who’s ready for Darth Monsanto and the Proprietary Sith?

      • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Yes and no. For a lot of fruits, it’s not like, “oh, I got a new variety of apple”, it’s more “how did my delicious apple create this inedible trash”.

        If you want to save seeds, places like the seed savers exchange sell only open pollinated, stable seeds where you can save them to get the same plant.

        • j4k3@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 month ago

          Thanks for the advice and reference. With my physical disability and situation, I’m looking at a future where these skills and knowing what works by experience might be important for my physical and mental health. At this point, I could buy almost anything and have better food options than most people. At the rate my life is going, and the lack of help I’ve been able to access, I’m just preparing for a potential future. I am looking for things I can access and utilize within government issued food aid limitations, and how best to minimize my waste now while I have no effective constraints. I’m not paralyzed but I am very limited in how long I can sit upright or stand. I can’t do anything labor intensive or much lifting, but I can easily do things around the house that are 5-10 minutes here and there across the hours of my day spent mostly lying down. Even the potential failures do not bother me. The actual experience will make the information stick in my mind on my abstracted intuitive map of knowledge in such a way that I am likely to remember it for decades, if not the rest of my life.

          You wouldn’t happen to know if Rosemary stalks can be rooted would you? I could try that one right now.

          • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            I definitely understand wanting to learn stuff for yourself. I’m definitely like that in some ways; learning is part of the fun.

            I’ve rooted rosemary before, but it took a while. I was using an old, woody section, though, and apparently it’s way better if you use new growth.