My wife and I always have this debate about garden space every year. She's not a huge tomato fan, but I am, and so I always want to plant more plants than we really have garden space for. I've got a big yard, so I could plow up another corner of it for tomato plants, but that sounds like a lot more work than I'm willing to put up with-Plus, I'm sure I'd be the one that would end up weeding the "extra" plot.
So, while watching late-night television one night, they had a commercial for an upside down tomato plant. It was some sort of a cone shaped deal ("act now, and we'll throw in an additional-insert product name here-for free!) and it didn't trip my trigger, but it sure got me thinking.
That following week, I did some scrounging around in the garage and shed, and I found what I think is the perfect upside down tomato planter. It's a simple 2.5 gallon bucket with a metal handle. I drilled some small holes in the side and bottom for water drainage and then cut out about a 1.25" hole in the center of the bottom for the tomato plant to fit through. In thinking about the future plant's weight, I decided that the system needed a membrane of some sort that the root system would fit through, so I used a scrap piece of foam underlay for a recently installed laminate floor. I cut this in a small square, just slightly bigger (probably 3" square) than the hole that was cut in the bottom of the bucket, and cut an X shaped slit in the membrane.
Next, I had to find a tomato plant, so went out and purchased one that had a good start on it and carefully transplanted it to the bucket. To do this, you have to remove some of the soil backed around the root system and then shove what remains up through the hole in the bottom of the bucket, then take the membrane, and push the plant through the membrane to a hight that seems like the right depth for planting. Now, while someone holds the bucket and the plant, you fill the bucket with potting soil (or good planting dirt) and poof, you are done.
Now you need to hang the bucket somewhere. First thing I tried was a shepherds hook plant hanger. That worked great for awhile, but we had a huge storm about a week and a half into first effort, and the shepherds hook fell over and damaged the stem of the tomato plant. I thought for about 5 days after the storm that the plant was going to make it, but alas, no good. So, undaunted, had my wife go and find me another tomato plant and I started over.
It was the end of the good tomato's at the various shops, so ended up with 3 really scraggy tomato plants that looked like they were on their last legs. They had some green in them, so I thought we'd give it a try. Not knowing which of the plants (if any) were going to survive, however, we planted them all in the same bucket. I didn't have anything other than the shepherds hook free to hang them on, so I used the shepherds hook at the end of the cloths line and tied it with wire to the metal pole. It's not going down this time.
The results have been slow in coming, put two weeks after the planting or so, we have a nice tomato bush growing out of the bottom of the bucket. It has a long ways to go to catch up with my two other plants that were planted quite some time ago, but it looks like the plant will bear fruit at some point. We have our first blossom now, so the rest is a waiting game. I've got a vision for next year if the current system works, that will expand on the upside down tomato theme even further.
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Friday, January 4, 2008
Music the Amie Street Way
The following editorial comment was submitted to Amie Street (http://amiestreet.com), January 1, 2008. I've also included some of my favorite Amie Street picks (samples only) linked to the Amie Street player below the editorial. Enjoy... And open an Amie Street account soon:
As we get ready for 2008, it seems appropriate to look back on the state of music in 2007, the shifting music purchase paradigm, and the role that Amie Street has played in the revolutionizing, both for the seller and the consumer, the music industry as we know it.
I've always searched for new and different music. For as long as I can remember, even growing up in a back-woods town in Nebraska, I've looked to discover new music. My interests are broad, so music doesn't have to be a particular genre, it just has to be good. In those early days, 1969 to 1979 or so, it was scouring the dial for an FM radio station that would play more than the "hits." That was a lot easier to find then than now. When FM gave way to MTV, MTV was radical and new. There are many groups who can thank MTV for their start; groups such as REM and U2 made the air waves, because they made the MTV circuit first. In the mid 80's, I subscribed to CD Review, a Wayne Green publication that came with a CD as part of the sub every month. When CD Review seemed poised for the cutting room floor, I came across CMJ New Music Monthly in the early 90's and was introduced to many a group from the pages of the magazine and the CD that was included with each issue. CMJ is still something that I receive every month, but it's looking like the next renewal cycle, I'll just let it expire. Why? The answer is Amie Street.
How I found Amie Street in the first place, I'm not even sure. A music blog may have pointed me there or someone may have told me about it. All I know is that since discovering Amie Street almost a year ago, I've purchased a great number of excellent MP3's-most as complete CD sets. There are broad ranges of music to choose from, so it fits my eclectic tastes nicely, and the pricing model allows great music to excel and mediocre music to languish. Combining Amie Street with Facebook's Fantasy Record label (editors note: Fantasy Record Label no longer exists), allows me to introduce music to my friends, too, while hopefully promoting an artist or two that needs the exposure. Amie Street's artist payment policy is generous, unlike major labels who keep a large percentage for marketing, packaging, inventory, add infinitum.
There is great reason to hope that 2008 will continue to provide musicians a new home while providing bargain basement pricing for music hungry consumers such as myself. Here's to you, Amie Street! I raise my glass and toast a successful 2007 and wish artists, consumers and staff alike, a very happy and successful 2008.
Recent Amie Street Favorites:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we get ready for 2008, it seems appropriate to look back on the state of music in 2007, the shifting music purchase paradigm, and the role that Amie Street has played in the revolutionizing, both for the seller and the consumer, the music industry as we know it.
I've always searched for new and different music. For as long as I can remember, even growing up in a back-woods town in Nebraska, I've looked to discover new music. My interests are broad, so music doesn't have to be a particular genre, it just has to be good. In those early days, 1969 to 1979 or so, it was scouring the dial for an FM radio station that would play more than the "hits." That was a lot easier to find then than now. When FM gave way to MTV, MTV was radical and new. There are many groups who can thank MTV for their start; groups such as REM and U2 made the air waves, because they made the MTV circuit first. In the mid 80's, I subscribed to CD Review, a Wayne Green publication that came with a CD as part of the sub every month. When CD Review seemed poised for the cutting room floor, I came across CMJ New Music Monthly in the early 90's and was introduced to many a group from the pages of the magazine and the CD that was included with each issue. CMJ is still something that I receive every month, but it's looking like the next renewal cycle, I'll just let it expire. Why? The answer is Amie Street.
How I found Amie Street in the first place, I'm not even sure. A music blog may have pointed me there or someone may have told me about it. All I know is that since discovering Amie Street almost a year ago, I've purchased a great number of excellent MP3's-most as complete CD sets. There are broad ranges of music to choose from, so it fits my eclectic tastes nicely, and the pricing model allows great music to excel and mediocre music to languish. Combining Amie Street with Facebook's Fantasy Record label (editors note: Fantasy Record Label no longer exists), allows me to introduce music to my friends, too, while hopefully promoting an artist or two that needs the exposure. Amie Street's artist payment policy is generous, unlike major labels who keep a large percentage for marketing, packaging, inventory, add infinitum.
There is great reason to hope that 2008 will continue to provide musicians a new home while providing bargain basement pricing for music hungry consumers such as myself. Here's to you, Amie Street! I raise my glass and toast a successful 2007 and wish artists, consumers and staff alike, a very happy and successful 2008.
Recent Amie Street Favorites:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labels:
Amie Street,
Illustraded Man,
Kate MacCleod,
Music,
Wiretree
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