Search
Latest topics
» N & C Midwest: Nov. Dec. 2024by Scorpio Rising Today at 8:23 pm
» Butterbaby Hybrid Squash (Butternut)
by Scorpio Rising Today at 8:19 pm
» Indoor Lighting for Kitchen Herbs & Lettuce
by OhioGardener 11/22/2024, 6:58 pm
» Catalog season has begun!
by OhioGardener 11/22/2024, 3:35 pm
» Happy Birthday!!
by AtlantaMarie 11/22/2024, 4:13 am
» Interesting Marketing for Compost
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 7:29 pm
» How does green turn to brown?
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 4:58 pm
» Ohio Gardener's Greenhouse
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 12:16 pm
» Tree roots, yeeessss.....
by sanderson 11/20/2024, 2:21 am
» The SFG Journey-Biowash
by has55 11/19/2024, 7:37 pm
» What are you eating from your garden today?
by OhioGardener 11/19/2024, 8:27 am
» Cooked worms?
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/19/2024, 1:04 am
» New SFG gardener in Auckland
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/16/2024, 11:25 pm
» Kiwi's SFG Adventure
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/12/2024, 7:10 pm
» Thanksgiving Cactus
by OhioGardener 11/12/2024, 5:40 pm
» Need Garden Layout Feedback
by markqz 11/9/2024, 9:16 pm
» Thai Basil
by Scorpio Rising 11/8/2024, 8:52 pm
» How best to keep a fallow SFG bed
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/8/2024, 8:11 pm
» Preserving A Bumper Tomato Harvest with Freezing vs Canning
by plantoid 11/7/2024, 11:36 am
» Mark's first SFG
by sanderson 11/6/2024, 11:51 pm
» What Have You Picked From Your Garden Today
by OhioGardener 11/5/2024, 2:29 pm
» Greetings from Southeastern Wisconsin
by sanderson 11/5/2024, 2:01 pm
» Spinning Compost Bin-need some ideas
by rtfm 11/2/2024, 7:49 pm
» Growing fruit trees in Auckland
by OhioGardener 10/31/2024, 4:23 pm
» Vermiculite -- shipping sale through 10/31/2024
by markqz 10/30/2024, 2:27 pm
» N & C Midwest: October 2024
by Scorpio Rising 10/30/2024, 10:38 am
» Old Mulch and Closing Beds for Winter
by sanderson 10/26/2024, 11:00 pm
» Hello from Land of Umpqua, Oregon Zone 8b
by sanderson 10/25/2024, 3:14 pm
» Hello everyone!
by SFGHQSTAFF 10/24/2024, 3:22 pm
» Senior Gardeners
by sanderson 10/23/2024, 6:09 pm
Google
Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
+27
Gunny
FamilyGardening
CapeCoddess
cpl100
Triciasgarden
songstriss
alexrobort
greatgranny
elliephant
TN_GARDENER
martha
tomperrin
Kelejan
kgooding
Goosegirl
BackRiver_SFG
subsonic
BetsyC
GWN
kbb964
brenda g
plantoid
JustMe
littlesapphire
kittykat
walshevak
rose1971
31 posters
Page 1 of 3
Page 1 of 3 • 1, 2, 3
Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I thought this was pretty neat and wanted to share a link I found :-)
http://www.17apart.com/2012/02/growing-celery-indoors-never-buy-celery.html
I cannot wait to give it a try.
http://www.17apart.com/2012/02/growing-celery-indoors-never-buy-celery.html
I cannot wait to give it a try.
rose1971- Posts : 9
Join date : 2012-02-13
Location : NY
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I'm also interested in the bok choy regrowing at the bottom. I've always pulled the entire bok choy plant because it bolts so quickly. But now I'm thinking I should just be giving it a haircut and letting it grow back.
Kay
Kay
A WEED IS A FLOWER GROWING IN THE WRONG PLACE
Elizabeth City, NC
Click for weather forecast
walshevak
Certified SFG Instructor- Posts : 4370
Join date : 2010-10-17
Age : 81
Location : wilmington, nc zone 8
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
From this Link you can basically do the same with Bok Choy check it out. Hope it works out. I love learning about new things and I've been planting on/off for years.
http://www.17apart.com/2012/02/how-to-regrowing-bok-choy.html
http://www.17apart.com/2012/02/how-to-regrowing-bok-choy.html
rose1971- Posts : 9
Join date : 2012-02-13
Location : NY
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
rose1971 wrote:I thought this was pretty neat and wanted to share a link I found :-)
http://www.17apart.com/2012/02/growing-celery-indoors-never-buy-celery.html
I cannot wait to give it a try.
Well! Who'da thunk? The kids will be thrilled about this one! Got an almost-done celery in the fridge right now that will make a good candidate!
Thanks for posting!!
kittykat- Posts : 194
Join date : 2012-03-18
Location : Coastal Britsh Columbia
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
Thanks for sharing this! I was looking at celery plants at the store and wondered if it would be worth growing it at home. But regrowing something that I would have stuck in the compost bin is definitely worth a try. Same with the green onions. Wow.
JustMe- Posts : 237
Join date : 2011-06-23
Location : SE Wisconsin, Zone 5a
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
There was a thread about this a week or so ago . I started mine then. when the celery reached two inches high I planted it out in MM ( yesterday ) and watered it in well .
Photo's taken and will be put up with observations when the first hand is harv ested.
I plan on doing this with celery for the next three or four months to provide us with a succession of a plant a week .
Once harvested I'll do the same again to the regrown stump & see just how many regrows I can get . The retained part of the hand of celery used for this experiment is stood up right in the wine bottle holder area of the fridge in a food grade polybag with a 1/4 inch of water in the bottom . It's been there 6 days and is still quite edible cooked or raw.
I hope to try and overwinter grow some celery produced in this manner in the office in plastic buckets away from the slugs ,frosts and bad weather , at least it will blanch easily away from strong light .
Photo's taken and will be put up with observations when the first hand is harv ested.
I plan on doing this with celery for the next three or four months to provide us with a succession of a plant a week .
Once harvested I'll do the same again to the regrown stump & see just how many regrows I can get . The retained part of the hand of celery used for this experiment is stood up right in the wine bottle holder area of the fridge in a food grade polybag with a 1/4 inch of water in the bottom . It's been there 6 days and is still quite edible cooked or raw.
I hope to try and overwinter grow some celery produced in this manner in the office in plastic buckets away from the slugs ,frosts and bad weather , at least it will blanch easily away from strong light .
plantoid- Posts : 4095
Join date : 2011-11-09
Age : 73
Location : At the west end of M4 in the UK
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
Ha! I tried to grow celery from seed a few months ago and it was truly an exercise in frustration! Thanks for posting the link - I am sooo excited to try this!!
brenda g- Posts : 79
Join date : 2012-04-05
Location : Michigan, Upper Penninsula
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I am going to go buy celery tonight, hopefully my last buy till fall?
kbb964- Posts : 317
Join date : 2012-03-28
Age : 61
Location : Rochester Hills, Michigan
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
Hey guys! I've been experimenting with the celery regrowth, and it's working out really well for me! Anyone else trying it?
I just wanted to say that I found out there are OTHER things you can regrow, lots of things! You can do the same thing with bok choy, with lettuce, with green onions, I even saw carrots. Now I'm curious what else you could do this with!
I just wanted to say that I found out there are OTHER things you can regrow, lots of things! You can do the same thing with bok choy, with lettuce, with green onions, I even saw carrots. Now I'm curious what else you could do this with!
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I am definitely going to give this a try.
The celery I grew from seed has been quite interesting, in that I grew way too much and transplanted them to 3 inch peat pots gradually.
Oddly enough a few of them are WAY ahead of the others, I am thinking perhaps tiny variations in my mels mix is perhaps responsible for the difference. (each batch is not identical)
I would LOVE to have celery on my windowsill all winter. COOL
The celery I grew from seed has been quite interesting, in that I grew way too much and transplanted them to 3 inch peat pots gradually.
Oddly enough a few of them are WAY ahead of the others, I am thinking perhaps tiny variations in my mels mix is perhaps responsible for the difference. (each batch is not identical)
I would LOVE to have celery on my windowsill all winter. COOL
GWN- Posts : 2799
Join date : 2012-01-14
Age : 68
Location : british columbia zone 5a
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
That seems too easy and cool to even work, but the proof is in those photos, so I am going to have to give this a spin myself!
BetsyC- Posts : 87
Join date : 2012-05-06
Age : 69
Location : VA- 7A
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I am in
anytime I can find a way to get free starts, I am all over it, who would have thought?
but then I have done a lot of starts from stuff I bought at the store
anytime I can find a way to get free starts, I am all over it, who would have thought?
but then I have done a lot of starts from stuff I bought at the store
subsonic- Posts : 66
Join date : 2012-04-20
Age : 66
Location : Riverside Ca. Lots of sun and hot in the summer
for the winter crop!
Neat article. Thanks for sharing.
I have decided that during the long cold winter months that I am going to grow a small indoor garden this winter. Fresh basic leaf lettuce salads now to include celery! Can't wait to try.
I have decided that during the long cold winter months that I am going to grow a small indoor garden this winter. Fresh basic leaf lettuce salads now to include celery! Can't wait to try.
BackRiver_SFG- Posts : 108
Join date : 2011-07-06
Location : East Weymouth- Zone 6B
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I am looking forward to trying this! I never use more than a few stalks at a time, so I am hoping I can grow one and cut stalks as I need them instead of letting the whole thing turn floppy!
GG
GG
Goosegirl- Posts : 3424
Join date : 2011-02-16
Age : 59
Location : Zone 4A - NE SD
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I love this idea! I use very little celery in our house so whenever I buy it I end up using less than half the stalk and the rest goes bad. I've never grown celery so I have to ask, can you just cut off stalks as you need them? If you could if would be worth it to grow just for the fact that I wouldn't have to throw so much away!
kgooding- Posts : 51
Join date : 2012-01-21
Age : 44
Location : Roswell, GA
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I missed this thread until now, but the funny thing is that I discovered by accident that I could regenerate a bok choy base as I chopped off the upper prtions as I needed them, then found that the stub was pushing out these little yellow leaves. so I did almost exactly what it showed in the blog but did not get as far as transplanting into soil.
And there I thought I had had discovered something all by myself.
For a single person who wants to plant half a dozen transplants when there is so much else to grow.
And there I thought I had had discovered something all by myself.
For a single person who wants to plant half a dozen transplants when there is so much else to grow.
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
Kgooding, I have read several places that you can just cut off stalks as you need them!
Ok guys, I've been experimenting with this idea. I got some "artisan" lettuce (I guess that's what they call lettuce that's not iceberg), cut off the leaves, and stuck them in the water with my celery. They've been taking off! They're really doing great. My celery has been very slow to take off, but as you can see, it's finally getting some baby stalks coming up. I think I put this in water maybe two weeks ago.
Now I just need to figure out what to do with it now... I'm not really sure how to plant it.
Ok guys, I've been experimenting with this idea. I got some "artisan" lettuce (I guess that's what they call lettuce that's not iceberg), cut off the leaves, and stuck them in the water with my celery. They've been taking off! They're really doing great. My celery has been very slow to take off, but as you can see, it's finally getting some baby stalks coming up. I think I put this in water maybe two weeks ago.
Now I just need to figure out what to do with it now... I'm not really sure how to plant it.
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
I decided just to plant them outside in the planter I set up for them. I'll let you all know how it goes!
Reply with quote Report post to moderator or admin Lock post for new reports Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
As soon as I noticed this thread three days ago I rushed to the fridge, cut off the celery stalk leaving a couple of inches of stalk and shoved it into an empty square. Today, the center leaves are shooting up.
How cool is that?! Takes a lot less time than planting from seed.
Add celery to the list of vegetables that can be started from the supermarket aisles.
My short list so far:
potatoes (organic)
white pearl onions
garlic
leeks (no first hand experience here)
celery
Tom
How cool is that?! Takes a lot less time than planting from seed.
Add celery to the list of vegetables that can be started from the supermarket aisles.
My short list so far:
potatoes (organic)
white pearl onions
garlic
leeks (no first hand experience here)
celery
Tom
tomperrin- Posts : 350
Join date : 2011-03-20
Age : 82
Location : Burlington, NJ Zone 7a (2012 version), in the hollow, surrounded by trees.
Huh?
"Reply with quote Report post to moderator or admin Lock post
for new reports Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again"
Huh?
tomperrin- Posts : 350
Join date : 2011-03-20
Age : 82
Location : Burlington, NJ Zone 7a (2012 version), in the hollow, surrounded by trees.
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
Mine is growing, too, Tom. I stuck in a second one today. And I stuck mine in dirt first, then read the directions! But it grew anyway - made me very happy!
T(hat reply stuff looks like an elbow resting on a wrong button to me!)
T(hat reply stuff looks like an elbow resting on a wrong button to me!)
martha- Posts : 2173
Join date : 2010-03-03
Age : 67
Location : Acton, Massachusetts Zone 5b/6a
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
Just want to report that my celery only really started to grow once it was outside in the dirt! The lettuce is also doing well, it's getting much bigger and the red lettuce has turned red! Once it's warmer I'll take a picture. Next time, I'm only going to soak the celery and lettuce in water overnight before planting.
Tom, that's a pretty cool list you have there. I never thought of using pearl onions, but I guess it makes perfect sense. How wel do store bought potatoes do in the garden? I know people say never use store bought potatoes,but a lot of SFG folks seem to do it. It would sure cost a lot less, at least.
Tom, that's a pretty cool list you have there. I never thought of using pearl onions, but I guess it makes perfect sense. How wel do store bought potatoes do in the garden? I know people say never use store bought potatoes,but a lot of SFG folks seem to do it. It would sure cost a lot less, at least.
Store bought spuds in the garden
littlesapphire wrote: How well do store bought potatoes do in the garden? I know people say never use store bought potatoes,but a lot of SFG folks seem to do it. It would sure cost a lot less, at least.
Here's a photo of my spuds from a month ago.
A month after this photo was taken, my store bought spuds are in full flower. I bought the supermarket potatoes from two different stores back in November and stored them in a cool dark place in my garage. Temps in the garage varied from 40F to 55F. I used only organic potatoes. When I planted them they had all sprouted. I used generic russets, reds and yellows. Of these, I only had a handful of reds, and they seem to have done the best, going by the tops. Total cost of seed potatoes for this 3.5' x 8' bed was $15.00 ($4.99 for 5 lbs). Compare that with the $16 a pound I spent for certified organic seed potatoes, and the sixty cents a pound I spent for ordinary seed potatoes. An additional benefit of the store bought is that I could get these in the ground long before I could get certified seed potatoes shipped, as shippers don't want to risk freezing the potatoes in transit.
Tom
tomperrin- Posts : 350
Join date : 2011-03-20
Age : 82
Location : Burlington, NJ Zone 7a (2012 version), in the hollow, surrounded by trees.
Re: Garden Tip - Never buy Celery Again
littlesapphire wrote:Just want to report that my celery only really started to grow once it was outside in the dirt! The lettuce is also doing well, it's getting much bigger and the red lettuce has turned red! Once it's warmer I'll take a picture. Next time, I'm only going to soak the celery and lettuce in water overnight before planting.
Tom, that's a pretty cool list you have there. I never thought of using pearl onions, but I guess it makes perfect sense. How wel do store bought potatoes do in the garden? I know people say never use store bought potatoes,but a lot of SFG folks seem to do it. It would sure cost a lot less, at least.
My celery also has done well in the garden. As I understand it, it likes moist soil and can turn bitter if stressed too much. I also see that folks either hill dirt around the stalks to blanch them, or wrap newspaper around them (I'm going to try the newspaper in hopes it makes them easier to clean).
As far as the store bought tater thing goes, the main reason is they tend to spray store bought taters with growth inhibitors (they'll still sprout, but it might take longer). I'd go the same route as tomperin and just buy organic potatoes for the garden (some grocery stores sell em by the pound, so you can buy just what you need).
TN_GARDENER- Posts : 228
Join date : 2011-06-16
Location : TN
Page 1 of 3 • 1, 2, 3
Page 1 of 3
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum