digitS'
Garden Master
I don't really like plastic in the garden but when trying to keep track of what I'm growing out there, I'll make an exception.
Those white plastic plant labels, especially if'n they're about 7" can come in real handy.
Oh sure, I used to drive a stake in the ground and "dangle" a seed envelope on it. Of course, I usually, tore off the wrong end of the envelope and had to hang it upside down. Then, with the first strong breeze, half of them were gone. Half of those that remained, melted the 1st time I turned on the sprinkler. The rest of them faded terribly in the sun and always switched places at night so that I wouldn't know which was the Raider cucumber and which, the Straight 8.
Grow very many varieties and everything gets jumbled - it could be the plants themselves that are sneaking around in the dark and not the labels.
Anyway, I remember the 1st time I set the white plastic ones out there. The variety names were carefully written on them with a permanent marker.
Ha! What a joke ! You could see the words start to fade in a couple of weeks. By harvest, when it really matters, you've got a white stake, no ID, and no idea which variety did outstandingly and which was fair-to-middling.
So, I bought a real, honest, Weatherproof Marking Pen . . . you can find them in most seed catalogs, garden centers, and a few other places. The writing will easily last a season and the letters can be read in October, and will say the same thing they did in April.
Throw them away at the end of the season? No, I'm too cheap for that . But, it took me years to discover that rubbing alcohol on a paper towel makes them as clean as they were when new. All it takes, rubbing alcohol . . .
Steve
Those white plastic plant labels, especially if'n they're about 7" can come in real handy.
Oh sure, I used to drive a stake in the ground and "dangle" a seed envelope on it. Of course, I usually, tore off the wrong end of the envelope and had to hang it upside down. Then, with the first strong breeze, half of them were gone. Half of those that remained, melted the 1st time I turned on the sprinkler. The rest of them faded terribly in the sun and always switched places at night so that I wouldn't know which was the Raider cucumber and which, the Straight 8.
Grow very many varieties and everything gets jumbled - it could be the plants themselves that are sneaking around in the dark and not the labels.
Anyway, I remember the 1st time I set the white plastic ones out there. The variety names were carefully written on them with a permanent marker.
Ha! What a joke ! You could see the words start to fade in a couple of weeks. By harvest, when it really matters, you've got a white stake, no ID, and no idea which variety did outstandingly and which was fair-to-middling.
So, I bought a real, honest, Weatherproof Marking Pen . . . you can find them in most seed catalogs, garden centers, and a few other places. The writing will easily last a season and the letters can be read in October, and will say the same thing they did in April.
Throw them away at the end of the season? No, I'm too cheap for that . But, it took me years to discover that rubbing alcohol on a paper towel makes them as clean as they were when new. All it takes, rubbing alcohol . . .
Steve