| Hi lj. I have a friend who's just shared with me her first picking of the year of spinach, and it was good - crisp, thick wrinkled leaves. She was told by an old gardener friend to seed her spinach in the garden in late September, early October, and it's to sprout and get to the 2 leaf stage before winter hits (just how to time that she couldn't say). Hers got to the 4 leaf, so she wasn't sure how it would survive the winter, but it did. Here we are, middle of April, and she did her first picking last week. We had really cold weather the 2nd or 3rd week of March, it got down to -20 (or so it felt, I would have to check envi Canada's site for temperature history for our area), and the spinach did fine. Just a note, I checked out where she plants it (actually, she lets the summer plants grow and seed the area for her), and it is in a very sheltered (by large trees that wouldn't shade it too much) area, up against a white sided garage (which would reflect additional sun and heat) that is positioned to the plot's east, and there's a large fence to shelter from north wind, so I'm guessing she's got a microclimate that is a few zones warmer than a more exposed back yard (like mine which gets the full force of winter fury and west wind ripping through it). I'm adopting gladzoe's opinion, of wintersowing later than winter, I'm going to call it 'spring sowing', I know the marigolds and allysum should sprout and grow a bit outside, and I am trying zinnia's with caution, since I just don't have the window space needed for indoors. I'm not fooling myself, my starts will be smaller than if I had grow lights and started them 6-8 weeks before frost indoors, but I am confident they will be larger than if I direct sowed in the ground like the package says, and I should get blooms a little early. Good Luck, let us know how any experiments turn out. |