Melanie Heuiser Hill ampersand

author

Melanie Heuiser Hill

Melanie Heuiser Hill ampersand

author

Melanie Heuiser Hill

And Then There Was A Review

When you spend years writ­ing a book…YEARS…and then when it’s about to be birthed out into the big wide world…then come the REVIEWS. Or so I’ve heard, anyway.

And now it has come to pass.

It feels almost sur­re­al, hav­ing wait­ed so long. But Some­oneI­don’teven­know has read my book. And that some­one cared enough to review it. And they LIKED it, even! WOW.

Thanks for my first review, Eve Costarelli!

http://bit.ly/2qOrzkM

See How They Grow!

Four of the eight giant pump­kin seeds we plant­ed actu­al­ly ger­mi­nat­ed (or hatched, as I like to think of it). They have grown at a fan­tas­tic rate these past sev­en­teen days.

May 1st—Seeds start­ed in their lit­tle incu­ba­tor in the laun­dry room.

May 5th— the pale green loops begin to appear! (Those lit­tle green things with two leaves—weeds!)

May 9th—the first true leaf appears—that’s the high­est leaf in the pic­ture below. (True leaves are the first leaves that are actu­al foliage, not the seed leaves or cotyle­don leaves.)

May 11th (TWO DAYS LATER!)— the four that have “hatched” are off to the races!

We had a gor­geous Moth­er’s Day week­end here in Min­neso­ta and so the plants stepped out to enjoy the sun. Kept them in their bin for a lit­tle wind protection—they’ve been cod­dled in the laun­dry room up until now, so they need to be gen­tly intro­duced to the vari­ables of being out­side. We’ve brought them in at night as the temps are still drop­ping into the 40’s and 50’s.

You can see how much they liked Real Sun! We were gone all day on Sat­ur­day, and when we got home their leaves were notice­ably larger.

And today (May 17th), they’re reach­ing up out of their bin! We have storms this week, so it’s a con­stant tak­ing them out, chas­ing the sun, bring­ing them in when the thun­der rolls. (It’s not unlike hav­ing a pet, I sup­pose.) We’ve got a good start on these—we want to con­trol what we can while we can!

Right now, the weath­er is fore­cast­ed to be rainy and stormy until Sun­day. So we’ll rotate them in and out of the bin so they can get used to a lit­tle wind dur­ing the sun­ny times for the next few days, and then get ’em in the ground this week­end! The pump­kin patch looks like a tulip waste­land right now, so a lit­tle work will need to be done in preparation.….

In Which We Start the Giant Pumpkin Seeds.….

Starting pumpkin seeds

In Giant Pump­kin Suite, Rose and Thomas find the mys­te­ri­ous seed their neigh­bor, Mr. Pick­er­ing, has start­ed on May 1st.

May Day has long been the day I start giant pump­kin seeds—and by “long been” I mean this is my fourth year start­ing giant pump­kin seeds on May Day. I pull out my giant pump­kin bible: How-To-Grow World Class Giant Pump­kins The All-Organ­ic Way: The His­to­ry, The Peo­ple, The Pump­kins, The Records. The title gives me great con­fi­dence. You can see all my sticky-note tabs on the pages with real­ly impor­tant infor­ma­tion. I fol­low the instruc­tions rather reli­gious­ly when the project begins. (By the end of May, the plants are most­ly fend­ing for them­selves in the gar­den, to be honest.)

I get my seeds from the St. Croix Grow­er’s Asso­ci­a­tion. This year I paid big bucks—$25, I believe—for my seeds. This sounds like a lot for a few seeds, but some giant pump­kin seeds go for much more. These are sol­id seeds from prize-win­ning pump­kins and the mon­ey sup­ports a great local orga­ni­za­tion. The num­bers writ­ten on them undoubt­ed­ly mean some­thing about the parent­age of the seeds. I don’t know what, how­ev­er. Must inves­ti­gate! But I’ve not­ed and kept track of the num­bers just in case they wind up being significant.

First I file the edges, as my How-To book tells me to do. This helps the seed to germinate—helps the water pen­e­trate etc.

 

Then I soak the seeds for a few hours—water is pret­ty impor­tant for germination.

Final­ly, when the soil tem­per­a­ture in the pots is above 85 degrees (this requires a bit of a set up, as you can see below–and yes, I use a ther­mome­ter to check the tem­per­a­ture) and the soil is just past damp, but not sog­gy, I plant the seeds, pointy end down. My book warns me that these seeds are noto­ri­ous­ly fussy and dif­fi­cult to ger­mi­nate; hence, I always start more than I will need. But I’m hopeful—most years, most have germinated.

They will spend a cou­ple of weeks indoors in the laun­dry room’s make-shift giant pump­kin nurs­ery, then I’ll take the pre­cious fussy lit­tle plants out­side for a few hours each day for a week so they can accli­mate before they go in the ground. The pump­kin patch is full of tulips right now, so it’s not ready for pump­kins anyway.

May in Min­neso­ta is a wee bit unpre­dictable. On May Day this year we had snow show­ers. A cou­ple of days lat­er, we hit 70. We’ll wait for moth­er nature to even out a bit before sub­ject­ing the plants to the ele­ments! In Giant Pump­kin Suite, Rose and Thomas have to build a tent over the pump­kin plant and use a space heater—I’m hop­ing to avoid that.

So, they’ve been start­ed. I do not see any green pok­ing up yet, but it usu­al­ly takes a few days. Then, if we’re lucky, they’ll grow like crazy. For now, we water and keep things warm—fingers crossed!