Well, before I get to any updates today, I will share with you the most frustrating garden-related event of recent weeks. On May 17, I posted an update and a To-Do List. On the To-Do List was to order fertilizer, which I did promptly after posting that list. The name of the company from which I ordered my fertilizer will remain undisclosed, for reasons which will soon become apparent. However, this company offered a very reasonably priced 50 lb bag of organic alfalfa meal, which is exactly the stuff I wanted. In addition, this company is a small business fairly close to Fort Collins, which is a big bonus. I ordered a bag of fertilizer without further ado and awaited its arrival.
Ten days later, I received a rather brusque email from one of the company's employees. This email stated several things. First, it said that the company had never received my order, due to a glitch in their ordering technology. For this, the employee apologized sincerely. Next, the email said that the shipping price the site had given me was inaccurate - the upshot was that my total price would be almost twice what it was before. No apologies or offers of discounts for my trouble were attached to this information, although what had happened could be interpreted as false advertising. Finally, the employee offered me the opportunity to refund my order, if I so desired - or I could continue with my previous order, at the real price.
I decided that I would refund my order and went back to the website to see what the real shipping prices were for other products so that I could find a suitable replacement product. Sadly, the prices were still the same as when I had placed my first order! I wondered how many other customers were having the same issues as I. I added to my email a query about the price of a smaller quantity of alfalfa meal and the attached shipping. The employee replied with the prices, and eventually I decided on two 5 lb boxes of alfalfa meal. That's one-fifth of the amount I originally ordered, and it came for a higher price than what I originally ordered. Through this whole process, the employee was less than cordial, and did not approach apologetic, even though what should have been a quick, simple process had now turned into a bit of an ordeal. In light of the employee's lack of courtesy, I am in the process of writing a letter to our local Better Business Bureau.
Now, on to happier news. Yesterday we had gorgeous weather, and it seems as though the weather here has finally turned for the warmer (knock on wood), so I went ahead and planted most of the remaining crops. The first order of business was to extend the netting to cover at least some of the things I planted, but the net would have to turn a corner. The last time we tried that it didn't work well at all, so I cut the net, pulled it over a new hoop, and staked it down. Then I stretched the cut end of the net over the other net, at a 90-degree angle - thus turning the corner - added another hoop, and staked it down again. In the midst of this, I planted another row each of carrots and beets, four cucumber seeds, and two lemon cucumber seeds. Then I staked down the net and continued to plant elsewhere in the garden, according to the garden plan I created on Mother Earth News's website back in April (you can see the garden plans on our Facebook page).
In addition to the carrots, beets, and cucumbers, I planted four zucchini, six yellow squash, four butternut squash, three watermelon, three cantaloupe, and two melons of a variety called Tigger - I'm very excited for the last type in particular! After I planted all this, I did some light research to see when we can expect to see baby squash and melons. It looks like if this weather holds up, they'll all have sprouted within a week! Then, I transplanted our two kale plants and three of our broccoli plants, plus the three cabbage (two green, one red) that I got from the Starter Barter about a month ago. I'm stoked, to say the least.
On Friday, I transplanted the peppers into individual containers, and they are positively thriving. Next up are the eggplant, which are still somewhat puny. I'll be transplanting the tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant pretty soon here, but I want them to get a bit stronger first - after transplanting the tomatoes, we put them in the coldframe, and then we had a couple of cold nights. Three cherry tomatoes didn't make it, and most of the other plants wound up with chilling injury. I brought them back to the apartment to make sure they would be warm enough from here on out. After what happened to the tomatoes, I didn't put the peppers in the coldframe at all, but brought them back to the apartment as well for more windowsill time.
I have thinned the beets to one plant per cluster. I also bought six 3-ft-long pieces of rebar yesterday. When we start stacking additional tires on the ones the potatoes are in, I'll stick two pieces of rebar in each bottom tire to hold the stack up straight. The next tasks on the list are to remove the netting from the peas, put up the trellises for the peas, set up an anti-child barrier, and get more hoop materials from ReSource so that I can extend the netting over the squash, zucchini, and melons. As always, I shall continue to weed to keep those dastardly garden demons under control.
That's all for now. Thanks for reading!
WOG out.