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Front Garden Back Forty
  • Seed Starting

    How to Harden Off Seedlings (Without Losing Half of Them)

    Byfrontgardenbackforty@gmail.com May 30, 2026May 30, 2026

    Every spring, gardeners who did everything right, started seeds on time, got good germination, grew healthy seedlings under lights, go out to the garden and come back inside to find their plants are dying. Leaves bleached white. Stems folding. Plants that looked perfect yesterday look destroyed today. This is not a disease. It is not…

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  • Seed Starting

    Starting Peppers Indoors: Why They’re Not Like Tomatoes

    Byfrontgardenbackforty@gmail.com May 30, 2026May 30, 2026

    The most common pepper complaint, “I can’t get peppers to produce before frost,” almost always traces back to the same two mistakes: starting too late and treating them like tomatoes. Peppers and tomatoes are both warm-season solanums, and they get planted at the same time and grown in the same beds, so it seems reasonable…

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  • Soil Building

    Sheet Mulching: How to Build a New Bed Without Tilling

    Byfrontgardenbackforty@gmail.com May 12, 2026May 13, 2026

    There are many ways we converted new ground into rich, plantable soil over the years. As we experimented, so did others. The old method of covering ground to kill the weeds and laying compost to attract worms works. Sheet mulching with a layer of plain cardboard works even better.  What is sheet mulching Sheet mulching…

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  • Seed Starting

    Starting Tomatoes Indoors: A Week-by-Week Schedule

    Byfrontgardenbackforty@gmail.com May 4, 2026May 13, 2026

    Every year, the conversation about when to start tomatoes ends up in the same place: people who started too early are dealing with root-bound plants in four-inch pots with nowhere to go, waiting for a transplant date still three weeks out. And people who started too late are watching neighbors put plants in the ground…

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  • Seed Starting

    The Honest Difference Between Heirloom, Open-Pollinated, and Hybrid Seeds

    Byfrontgardenbackforty@gmail.com May 4, 2026May 14, 2026

    My family has been saving seeds from the same ground for over a hundred years. Not because of ideology. Because it worked. You pick the best fruit, dry the seeds, store them, and plant again next Spring. Over time, without any deliberate plan, you end up with something that belongs to your land. The tomatoes…

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