Times Colonist

Bizarre weather has altered vegetable seeding routines

- HELEN CHESNUT Garden Notes hchesnut@bcsupernet.com

Dear Helen: I’ve been wondering when the time is right for seeding my peas and carrots into the open garden. Opinions I’ve consulted vary widely.

L.D. Almost every home gardener I meet has been asking me a similar question. I think the bizarre weather patterns of recent years have thrown us all off our usual seeding routines. Gardeners never know what is going to happen next — a heat dome? Snow and ice? Could be anything these days.

Personally, and especially after last year’s early heat devastatin­g my peas, onions and carrots, I have begun regular consultati­ons with weather forecasts, beginning in February, looking for signs of conditions at least decent enough to take a chance on an extra-early seeding of the peas and carrots, hoping for resulting plantings that are developed enough to withstand another early heat wave.

In my experience, both peas and carrots have a better chance of germinatin­g well in soil temperatur­es somewhat below the ideal than in temperatur­es well above that ideal. An inexpensiv­e soil thermomete­r is helpful. General recommenda­tions indicate a minimum soil temperatur­e of 4.4 C for both peas and carrots. In some gardening traditions, St. Patrick’s Day, March 17, is pea planting day.

In addition to the earliest seeding possible, I also have shade cloth on hand to cover plants like leafy greens, peas, carrots and beets.

Dear Helen: I want to add colour to my vegetable plots this year by adding flowers as edging plants and in small groups, but I am looking for flowers that will be additional­ly useful as attractors of pollinator­s and other beneficial insects. What flowers are my best choices, and are marigolds useful for this purpose?

A.N.

Generally speaking, oldfashion­ed single flowers are most attractive and valuable to beneficial insects. Single daisytype flowers like shasta daisies and rudbeckias are among their favourites, along with smallflowe­red plants such as alyssum, dill, parsley and cilantro.

The first bees I see in the garden every year are in the crocus flowers and in the late winter heathers. In spring, flowers on over-wintered kale attract and nourish bees.

In summer, bees flock to blue borage blooms, California poppies, rosemary, lavender and thyme. All these grow in and around the vegetable plots.

As for marigolds, pot marigold (calendula) is a prized flower for the nourishing pollen it provides to pest predators, in particular hover (syrphid) flies, the earliest and most ubiquitous beneficial predator insect in my garden.

I often see syrphid flies hovering in clouds, like tiny helicopter­s, above parsley, cilantro, and sweet alyssum flowers.

Small-flowered, ferny-leaved signet marigolds in the “Gem” series attract hover flies, lady beetles and parasitic wasps. Lemon Gem is the most popular. The petals are edible, as are those of calendula.

Nasturtium­s’ bright flowers attract pollinator­s and pest predators. I use them with calendula to edge some vegetable plots.

Others are edged in sweet alyssum.

Dear Helen: Where do you buy shade cloth? I’ve heard of it, but never seen it in my local garden centres.

B.P.

Last summer many stores sold out of shade cloth. I purchase garden supplies like this almost exclusivel­y at local sources, but I failed to find shade cloth that I felt I could work with easily at any of my usual haunts.

I ended up ordering a trial package of Lee Valley’s green shade cloth, which turned out to be easily handled and a perfect size (2 m by 4 m) for placing over my carrot and green leafy vegetable beds as well as over the peas growing against wire fencing.

The cloth offers the recommende­d 50 per cent shade, and it lets air and water pas through easily. It cooled and shaded a planting of lettuces efficientl­y enough to allow for wonderful growth.

GARDEN EVENTS

Dahlia meeting. The Victoria Dahlia Society will meet on Thursday at 7 p.m. in St. Michael’s Church, 4733 West Saanich Rd. Ahead of the society’s tuber and plant sale on Saturday, April 13, three experience­d growers will describe how to successful­ly purchase, and sell, your dahlia tubers. A question-and-answer period will follow. Guests are welcome,

Plant sale. Camosun College Horticultu­re Technician students are hosting a Spring Plant Sale on Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at The Plant Shoppe, Royal Roads University, 2005 Sooke Rd. Perennials, shrubs, herbs, vegetable transplant­s, tomatoes and stone troughs.

 ?? ??
 ?? HELEN CHESNUT ?? The small flowers on fern-leaved signet marigolds attract beneficial insects.
HELEN CHESNUT The small flowers on fern-leaved signet marigolds attract beneficial insects.
 ?? HELEN CHESNUT ?? Spring flowers on kale plants attract and nourish bees.
HELEN CHESNUT Spring flowers on kale plants attract and nourish bees.

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