Hello there, Rural Sprout readers,  It feels like ages since we’ve sat on the front porch for a Sunday chat. I’ll spare
you the joke about how I haven’t seen you since last year. My 14-year-old beat that dead horse all New Year’s Day. His other siblings may have made threats involving his brand-new Nerf blaster and darts permanently embedded up his nose.  Ah, the joys of having the family home for the holidays.  I hope you all had a lovely holiday season.  It seems
like everyone I talk to was either sick themselves or had family members miss celebrations due to illness, myself included. I got an early Christmas present the Tuesday before Christmas – a positive covid test.  I’m still unsure what I did to land myself on the naughty list. I mean, I’m no saint, but geeze, Santa, that seems a bit harsh.  My plans to travel with the
Sweetheart to visit his family were canceled, and tentative plans for the eldest and her husband to visit were now up in the air. Luckily, my case was mild, but it made for a very quiet Christmas, nonetheless. Â I got my two negative test results within 48 hours just in time for my eldest and her hubby to come down from Buffalo. (Yes, that Buffalo. Thankfully the kids were in Syracuse visiting family and missed that horrible blizzard. It was
truly tragic.) They joined the boys and me for a late Christmas and some riotous celebrating and overeating.   I'm still finding empty chocolate wrappers and Nerf darts all over the
place.  It was the Sweetheart’s turn to have his plans turned upside down. He caught a nasty virus while out visiting his side of the family and was unable to travel back here to celebrate in time while all the kids were
here.  I think next year, I’m going to insist all immediate family members wear hazmat suits from Thanksgiving on.  Now that the holidays are firmly behind us, and I’m down to finding two Nerf darts a day around the house, it’s started – the January itch.  As a fellow gardener, I’m sure you know exactly what I’m referring to. It starts with that first seed catalog that shows up right before Christmas. “Too
early! What are they thinking?” you wonder as you toss it on “the pile” and get back to the craziness of the season at hand. But it’s too late; the seed is planted.  Later in the holiday, that moment comes after the presents have been unwrapped, the kids’ energy has finally petered out, and you’re all pleasantly full.   Everyone is slightly dazed by the sudden stillness and quiet after all the preparations and celebrations.  You’re
only half-watching the movie with everyone in the living room as you nudge the tray of cookies out of the way (the mere sight of them makes you queasy) and absent-mindedly grab a seed catalog from the pile on the coffee table.  Hmm, those are some nice-looking peppers. Didn’t we say we would grow the cabbages under row covers this year? And the tomatoes, there was something about moving the tomatoes.  Before you know it, you’re standing at the window, wine
glass in hand, looking at your empty garden with a far-away expression. Not unlike Clark Griswold dreaming of his backyard pool. Although, you probably don’t have any underwear models in red swimsuits in your garden.   Of course, this only gets worse as the holidays dissipate.  More seed catalogs show up in your mailbox, and you can’t help but look at them now. After all, you’ve made a resolution to lose eighty-five pounds by April
1st, and you resolved to start eating kale salads at every meal this year.  It’s bizarre. I see it happen among my gardening friends every year. It’s like that space following the holidays is begging to be filled with something, and our brains latch on to gardening. Logically, we know the start of the season is still months away. Heck, Phil is still sound asleep in his hole. He hasn’t even thought about waking to give us a guess as to whether or not we’ll have an early spring.
But in our heads, we’re off to the races anyway.    Dig out your garden notes from last year and start making plans. Sure, we’ve got weeks to go before planting things outside, but that doesn’t mean we can’t start planning inside.  Spend some time researching pests you struggled with last year. Start looking for a local nursery that carries native species for your landscaping. Go through your seed library and list the
seeds you need to replace. Figure out when you need to start seeds indoors. Pick out a new paste tomato variety; that one from last year was much too bland.  Now is the perfect time to do all that gardening-related reading and planning we’re all too busy to do during the fine weather. Hey, I hear Rural Sprout is a pretty good resource for stuff like that.  Â
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These beautiful plants show up each year for the holidays, but it's quite easy to get them to bloom again next year.
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Apparently this recipe is TOO good. We had a squirrel steal three suet cakes in a week, so we put a carabiner on the feeder to lock it closed...so the squirrel stole the whole suet feeder.
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If you've bought a houseplant in the last couple of years, you need to check the roots.
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Did you miss a newsletter or want to go back and read a few for inspiration - Click this link. Don't forget to check out our Facebook page for daily updates.  That's all for this week, Rural Sprout Readers.
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