The Sentinel-Record

Recycle your kitchen scraps into plants

- DEAN FOSDICK

“Garbage gardening” is an easy and inexpensiv­e way to grow flowers and edibles using kitchen scraps — the pits, seeds and roots that otherwise would be headed to a landfill. It’s a fun way to recycle. Educationa­l for the kids, too.

Chickpeas, for instance, can be coaxed to flower in hanging baskets, and beets can be transforme­d into showy dish gardens with their colorful purple and green foliage surroundin­g contrastin­g blooms.

Start new plants on the windowsill by using the byproducts from roots, nuts, tubers, beans, bulbs, seeds or cuttings. The “garbage,” if you will.

Water, pebbles, soil or peat can be used as a growing medium.

“Every plant you grow should go outside for five months or so, depending upon where you live,” said Peterson, from Scituate, Massachuse­tts. “Winter becomes a holding pattern ( for perennials), just keeping them alive. But once they’re out again, in summer, they’re wonderful.”

Marianne Ophardt, Washington State University Extension’s Benton County director, added, “Garbage gardening is done more to teach children about plants than it is to create new gardens.”

Children often want instant gratificat­ion, so keep things simple. Choose quick- sprouting plants like potatoes, beans, carrots, melons and radishes. “Pineapples wouldn’t be a good idea,” Peterson said; it takes pineapples two or more years to fully mature and produce flower stalks.

Beware trying to grow plants from imported fruits or vegetables, like the papaya, kiwi or pomegranat­e commonly found in grocery stores during the winter, Peterson said. Study labels for the fruits’ origin. Many have been irradiated, making them sterile, meaning they won’t sprout.

Also, avoid hybrid fruits and vegetables because their seeds won’t deliver the same taste.

Choose self- pollinatin­g produce, like tomatoes, Ophardt said. “You can save those seeds and get the taste you want.”

Citrus seeds are capable of becoming flourishin­g houseplant­s because they tolerate home temperatur­es and dry, indoor air. But under most home conditions, citrus plants started from seed will not flower or bear fruit, according to a University of New Hampshire Cooperativ­e Extension fact sheet.

“Indoor citrus plants seen with flowers and or fruits are special miniature varieties,” it said. “Plants grown from standard eating varieties will make decorative foliage specimens and attractive floor plants.”

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