So, I set out on the mission to become an apartment gardener. I am going to grow a selection of plants, and let you know how it goes. I will try to figure out which plants thrive in pots, which do not, and which require the least amount of effort to grow. Since I am the worst gardener I ever met, personally, this will be a huge challenge; I am not confident any of the plants I have decided to plant will actually grow. We shall call this Attempt One.
Today I went out and bought some yellow bean seeds, as well as two varieties of basil. I could have just kept Attempt One at only beans, but I feel as though beans are a little on the elementary side, in the sense that it is the plant you grow in elementary school- you know, in those white paper cups with your name on them so you can keep track of how fast they grow and make a bar graph of the progress. It's how teachers incorporate gardening into math. Growing beans and being proud of being able to grow a bean is kind of like blowing the seeds of a dandelion on the ground and then taking credit for the weeds that spring up between the sidewalk cracks. Thus, I got the basil. Mainly, because I like basil but also because I think it is hardy enough that I won't kill it too easily, but also because it feels like a half set up from beans.
Here is a photo of my apartment garden (in the tiki room):
I will keep you updated on the status of how these plants grow (since watching plants grow is so much fun), and keep you posted if I add any more plants to my repertoire, or if I kill any off. If you, dear reader, have any advice on easy plants for an apartment dweller to grow without a yard, please let me know.
5 comments:
good luck. if you have my black thumb, there's no telling what will (or won't) happen
At your sister's 2nd wedding shower, we all got a pot with daisy seeds in them (not sure on the variety, but I do know they were daisies). I grew those on a windowsill 17 stories up in an apartment in Brooklyn that summer. It worked out really well. They were actually planted in the ground a while after, and are still going strong to this day.
Anyway, my point is give daisies a try.
P.S. I may be reading your posts in reverse order, but I'm happily amused, Jenn.
Bobbi read your blog (savvy grandmother that she is) and suggests you try a patio tomato plant. She has now grown 12 tomatoes--and suggests that you may do the same. She said she has 1/2 acre of land but is using her deck as a garden site.
I always had good luck with growing geraniums in my apartments - they will grow year round, and if you keep nipping back the branches, will flower year after year. I still have some in my house, even though I have an outdoor garden now!
It seems as though I have quite a bit of gardening to do. I put geraniums and tomatoes on my list of plants to buy next time I make it to Pemberton Farms. Also, S, those were Shasta Daisies, I believe. I just saw my seed packet the other day but appear to have misplaced it. Once I find those I plan on growing them pronto. If they can grow in Brooklyn, I am sure Somerville will work, too.
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