Greetings Rural Sprout readers,Â
 My goodness, what a wild week! It’s been windy and cold and rainy and windy again. I’m watching snow flurries fly outside my window, and the wind has ensured I’ve found every tiny draft in my apartment.  My paperwhites have all but finished blooming, and my amaryllis will bloom in
another week or two. Naturally, I’m starting to get the “green itch.” All these seed catalogs showing up in the mail aren’t helping matters.  Â
I think it’s high time to start planning Garden 2024.
 Last season was probably the worst I’ve ever had, but enough time has passed that my gardening optimism is at its peak again.  We’re gardeners after all; it’s what we do. With each new season, we’re ready to blindly forge ahead into the soil, forgetting all the headaches from last year,
doing it all over again.   We’ll battle the pests, brave the elements and get frustrated over things not growing right.  Â
We’re gluttons for punishment, ay?
 I made the decision to till our no-till garden this past fall. We’ll till again in the spring when things start warming up. I got tired of fighting with the same pests that keep wintering over in the soil, so I decided to evict them.  I was disappointed. After all, we worked very hard on
improving the soil. But isn’t that the great thing about gardening? It’s so adaptable. There are always new things to try, new methods or tips to implement.  Every season we get a do-over. Â
We keep trying new things and tweaking and changing until it’s perfect.Â
 Ha, well, as perfect as we can get it with Mother Nature running the show.  If there’s one thing I’ve learned in my 30+ years of gardening, it’s certainly not how to grow the biggest pumpkin, or the most flavorful tomatoes, or how to get rid of aphids permanently; it’s
perseverance.  When it comes to not giving up, you’d be hard-pressed to find a tougher bunch than gardeners.Â
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Once the holidays are over, Christmas cactus blooms start to fade. Here's what you should do when…
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I first ran into the concept of using soil blocks when binging market gardening videos on YouTube.…
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Make your own seed packets so you can save seeds with our easy, free printable PDF template and…
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When the dark nights draw in and the winter months begin in earnest, my favorite thing to do is get…
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Making cultured buttermilk is easy to do, and requires no special equipment. Did you know that the…
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Buying remote land is a huge decision. Use these tips to help make your search easier, and know what…
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The peanut (Arachis hypogaea) is also known as the groundnut, goober or monkey nut. It is a legume…
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There are plenty of ways to increase yield from your edible garden. Often, the measures you can take…
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Designing and maintaining a front yard vegetable garden gives you more than just beautiful veggies,…
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For many of us, planning our garden is one of the things we enjoy about gardening. For others,…
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That's all for this week, Rural Sprout Readers.
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