Sunday, March 31, 2013

Home Sweet Home

Well, those littluns grow up so fast (sniff, sniff). It just seems like yesterday they were pokin' their heads out of the dirt for the first time. Now they are set to go out into the world as World Class Maters. Just wish I had a little 'Pomp and Circumstance' playing in the background - well, wait a minute ... is that just in my head? LOL


Here they all are in their SIPs. I haven't named them all yet, but the one up front is definitely Gimpy. Unfortunately Gimpy didn't do too well with a rogue gust of wind. I had him out enjoying the sunshine while I was getting his brothers planted. I've got a little crutch in there for him - hopefully he will make it.



As they were bursting to get out of the Mater Matic, I've put together this 'Lean-To-Matic' to keep them in that fake sun for another day or two. Crude? Yes, but functional.


And here's the proud Papa with the maters. Not bad for a smartphone snapshot, eh? I promised them I will have them out in the sun very soon!.

MM

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Big Talk from the Worm Guy Today

In response to Dad's attempt to chum the waters with some smack, let me just give a little example of what a mere four days in the Mater-Matic can do for a mater ...



As we can plainly see in this before-and-after example, my maters are a good three inches below the diffuser when I last raised it on Sunday the 24th. Now this evening as the picture on the right shows, the maters are raising the roof - they're not only up to the diffuser, they're trying to go around it. Put it another way, these maters are growing 3/4's of an inch a day!!!

Nothing to be ashamed of here ... NUH UH!!!



MM

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Maybe a Week Away from Moving Day?

From what I've been told from folks in these parts, the week after Easter is a great time to get your maters planted. And given how crowded the Mater Matic is getting, that may be the plan. 

Real cozy in there!
We'll have to see how the weather holds up. Granted it's been cold, rainy and wet for a few days, but these maters wouldn't know any different from being warm and sunny. 

Being that it's the weekend I did a little more work in the mad scientist lab. I took care of the usual weekend chores in the Mater Matic. I raised the diffuser a couple inches. I flushed the reservoirs, and checked all the hardware.

I also took the Chik Fil A pickle buckets and made four more SIPs. Unlike the others, these are green. I think I might use these for the maters - seem a little more fitting for the backyard. Granted there's not much you can do to blend a bunch of buckets into the surroundings, as they have a tendency to stand out a bit, but I figured it might be a little more pleasing to the eye if anyone takes a gander. 

I picked up a 1 1/4" hole saw from the hardware store. Cutting with the spade bit was a bit nerve-racking. Nothing gets the heart pumping then have one of those bite into a pickle lid and send it flying across the garage like a industrial strength frisbee. Luckily no damage, but it was enough to make me rethink my approach. The right tool for the right job they always say. The hole saw is much easier to control, and it makes cleaner cuts. As you can see below, my SIP making is getting better. I also thought it best to integrate support for some tomato cages, so I drilled three tiny holes just inside the rim of the bucket lid, and the cages fit fairly snug, even with no potting mix in the buckets. I suspect they'll do fine.

Here are the maters checking out their new homes.
While at the hardware store, I picked up a hose and some parts to complete the watering manifold. This is what I'll use to distribute water from the automatic timer to each bucket. I had thought on a couple different ways to approach this, but I figured the least expensive, most flexible way would be to repurpose a brass bib manifold for the job. Along it it and the connectors, I pulled out an old piece of EMT conduit and fashioned a support stake. I'll drive this into the ground behind the plants, connect the garden hose on one end, then run flex tubing from the others to each of the bucket snorkels. Here's what it looks like without the hoses and tubing:


The last thing I worked on was with the other greenery in the Mater Matic. My sweet peppers haven't grown much over the last few weeks, so I suspect they're past due for coming out of the flats.

I fabricated a smaller 'mini-SIP' from a water bottle and transferred one of them to it. I want to test this out to see how well keeping the plant indoors on the sill will do. I'll move these over gradually, just to make sure everything goes well.

MM

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Still Going Strong

Well, the Mater-Matic may have to give out a few Mea Culpas for having been missing in action  over the past few days. Been very busy with a new website update at work, so getting in front of a computer at home just hasn't been that much fun lately.

But my babies are making me proud so let me show them off a bit ...


They seem to be still going strong. Mind you, each one is nestled in a 2 liter bottle, so that should give you a good sense of how big they are. They took right to these 'mini-SIPs' without any fuss.


This afternoon I had to reorient the grow light so it's now horizontal, and bring up the diffuser about an inch. I still have several inches of space to work with, but I don't think I'll need all of it. I suspect I'll soon have the first graduating class of the Mater-Matic moving out into the world.

Speaking of which, I'm happy to report some very excited co-workers. All are saying their adopted maters are doing well - in fact they haven't taken out of their mini-SIPs yet. They have remarked how easy it's been to maintain them. One fellow is using his fishtank water to keep them going - apparently that's as good as worm tea!. 

I also hit the mother lode of pickle buckets, thanks to my local Chik-Fil-A, which means I'll have enough SIPs to meet my needs and have a few more to give out at work. 

MM

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Homage to the Worm Tea Brewer

In deference to dear 'ol Dad, and his Discovery Channel-worthy episodes on his Tea, I thought I'd do a little 'research', and put together a who's-who list of famous folks who share Dad's enthusiasm for the rich dark stuff ...


Perhaps the recipe was passed down from the 13 Lamas that came before him. Who knows? In spending a good chunk of your life in meditation, I'm sure you can come up with some very interesting stuff. A stout cup certainly is enough to get the robes flowing in the morning.









She has no doubt found a place in many a man's heart (and stomach) as she brought forth yummy 30 minute meals with the speed and demeanor of a chipper chipmunk, but perhaps the secret to her gravitas lies in something a little more off the trail. You know those Food Network types - always trying something off the wall, or maybe in the ground?




Some folks just like to have it on the go


Perhaps The World is not Enough for this strapping chap. Here we see him grinning as he gulps it down by the Goblet-ful. I'm sure with all the worldly travel he's done On His Majesty's Secret Service, he's sure to have picked up the love of a delicacy or two. After all when you have A License to Kill, you can Live and Let Die all those nay-sayers. And what's with the Lion on the forehead, ole boy? 



Speaking of Her Majesty, might I suggest a spot a lemon with that?



Ehh - just goes to show you have to know when to say when. When you start looking like a worm, you know you've had to much.














And it truly would not be a Tea Party without this guy showing up. 












Uh, yeah - soooo appetizing. Might have been brewed for a bit too long (like four years too long).




Monday, March 11, 2013

Bigger than Yesterday?

No trick photography ... just a quarter ...


I'm pretty sure they're a half inch taller than yesterday.

MM

Sunday, March 10, 2013

SIPs a Plenty

Here are a half dozen SIPs I made this weekend. These are going to work with me tomorrow, along with all my extra maters - to be adopted by some mater enthusiasts ...


Oh, and incidentally, Sherrie thought she was very funny when she suggested an improvement on my design. Well, guess what Sis - not only can I take your Port A Potty poke, I can actually improve upon it ...


Won't all your neighbors be jealous! HAHAHAHA!

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Busy Day for the Mater Matic

I had quite a list of things to accomplish, so today I hit the ground running. I needed to transplant the maters from the flats to larger digs, and that also meant that some of my maters would part ways. Given this was my first time trying to grow anything from a seed, I planted all thirty seeds expecting that most wouldn't make it. To my surprise, from 30 seeds I ended up with 24 seedlings - much better results than I expected.

So the first task was to make new homes for my maters. Given the success of my 'soil wicking' approach, I enlisted the help of Team Mater Matic (which now extends to several of my co-workers) to collect some 2 liter plastic bottles. Steve and Ryan came through big time ...


These went from recycle bin refugees to 'mini-SIPs' as follows:

  1. Drill a half inch hole in each of the plastic caps
  2. Strip off the labels
  3. Drill 8 small holes around the crown of the bottle to allow for soil weeping
  4. Measure 6" from the mouth and cut around the bottle, and set the top part aside
  5. Trim about 2" from the original cut line off the bottom part
  6. Cut a 1 1/2" by 1 1/2" piece of landscape fabric, and place over the mouth of the bottle
  7. Screw the cap down over the landscape fabric
  8. Turn the top part upside down and sit it into the bottom part ...Voila!

So the idea behind these is that the bottom acts as the reservoir, holding about a cup of water, and as the potting mix and plant use up the moisture in the top part, the water 'wicks' up through the hole in the cap and replenishes the top part. And given they are portable, I can bring my extras to work and my colleagues can sit these out on a sunny window ledge indoors until it warms up enough to transfer them outside.

After building the mini-SIPs, I had to do some surgery on the Mater-Matic. The mid-shelf supports had been used to hang the reflector, but now the plants had outgrown the space and the supports had to go. So using my angle grinder I removed the four bars of the shelf support, and rebuilt a fresh diffuser that hung down from the top shelf supports. The refab works nicely, and should now have enough room for the plants until it's time to move them outside.

Nate and I then took a drive out to Tractor Supply and picked up some spagham moss, perlite, dolomite and some organic fertilizer. I mixed up the moss and perlite with water, and added a little bit of the composted manure I had left over from planting the flats. SIPs require this type of mix due to the need to wick moisture. In packing the mix in the mini-SIPs, I added a little of the dolomite in the bottom, then added more mix. I used a couple of shims to extract the seedlings from the flats. Then I added a teaspoon of the fertilizer around the perimeter of the container, and gave each one a good watering to ensure enough moisture to keep the wicking going.


Here are all the seedlings that are destined for backyards of Team Mater Matic. The picture is a bit dark given the sun had gone down and this was all my garage lights could muster.


And here are my final five - the five largest and healthiest of the bunch, all tucked in their modified mini-SIPs - modified in the sense that the bottoms have 1/2 holes drilled in them. These are going back in the Mater-Matic, so I needed to come up with a way to use the existing reservoirs to feed the water to them. The holes allow the water into each bottom to draw up into the wick.


Tomorrow I'll be up to my knees in pickle buckets - wait to you see all the SIPs! I'll post some pics when I'm done!

MM

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The Makings of a Bucket Brigade

Well, I thought I'd start things off with a couple snapshots of how things are growing in the Mater-Matic ...


Looks like a stand of trees next to that old dime, now doesn't it? I'll have to make change for a quarter soon, I think. More than a couple are approaching the three inch mark.  And lots of leaves on all of them! I had to raise the diffuser another half inch too. The next time I'll be going up a peg hole or two on the light, as well as moving the reflector above the mid-shelf.

Hey Dad, I agree it's been a while since we've got a peek of what your littlun's are doing. You got that fancy camera of yours in the shop or what?


The sweet peppers and onions seem to be faring well. I believe I'm making good headway on my ingredients list for salsa!

The compliments on my 'high-tech sippy cup' - as Dad put it - are very much appreciated, if not inspiring. I brought my planters to work, as there are a few mater admirers there. It seems the notion of sippy cups for maters is catching on. As of today, I have several requests for making more of them, thus beginning the formation a 'bucket brigade' of sorts. And thanks to some very resourceful colleagues, I should be getting several more 5 gallon buckets in the very near future. Yes, indeed this little endeavor may very well have started an unofficial Hagemeyer tomato competition, too! The fruits (pun intended) of my labor will certainly go forth and conquer more than just my backyard.

Looks like it's back to the mad scientist laboratory for me this weekend! 

MM

Saturday, March 2, 2013

SIPping My Maters Into These

In case you were wondering what I was planning to do with my maters once they graduate from the Mater-Matic, here's your answer ...



Incidentally, the Mater-Matic is still going strong. Here are what my littlun's are looking like this
weekend ...



...and as you can see, the green onions and the sweet peppers are coming along nicely as well ...