Monday, August 18, 2025

Roots First: Cold Starting Seedlings

 

Roots First


I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God has been making it grow. So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things  grow. The one who plants and the one who waters have one purpose, and they will each be rewarded according to their own labor.  For we are co-workers in God’s service; you are God’s field, God’s building.

(1 Corinthians, 3:6-11)



I never had the time to advance beyond a beginner’s level for gardening. My success in growing plants was limited between raising kids, ministry responsibilities, and running a business. The most I could grow were a few roses, tiger lilies and some ground cover. I tried a few other varieties off and on over the years but they failed for various reasons; Some had the wrong sun exposure, were being watered incorrectly, lacked care, or had pests. It was a time when not many flowers graced my space. My approach to my yard was haphazard and unintentional. That was until 2 years ago; with our kids grown and having families of their own, we found ourselves in a large house that we didn’t need. We packed our lives and traded a tiny yard and big home for a cozier setting on two acres. My yard became a blank


canvas. I was excited to fill it with color. I bought dozens of seed packets, watched zillions of YouTube tutorials and since it was late fall decided to try some cold starts. I soon discovered that seeds come in all shapes and sizes, and that not all are suitable for cold starting. Out of the 20 seeds I started about 12 actually produced any seedlings. My Bachelor Buttons and Sweet Peas went crazy; I had more than I knew what to do with. Shasta Daisies did great, as did Marigolds, Hollyhock and Cosmos. The milk jugs protected the little seedlings from frost in February and when spring arrived I was able to transplant them into their places in the yard. It is so much fun when you look into the milk jug and see the seedlings pop up their heads, but don’t be fooled. Those three weeks that you are patiently waiting to see those green heads pop through, there is a lot going on below, even though you can’t see it. Healthy plants start with healthy roots.

Healthy roots require the right type of dirt, water and temperature. How you prepare the soil and plant the seeds matters. After that all you can do is wait. You have to trust that the process will work……the roots grow first then you see the result. Sharing the Gospel of Jesus with others can be intimidating and exciting all at the same time. At first due to fear, or a lack of knowledge, we may not see many seedlings grow. Let’s face it, God is the one who created the seed in the first place. It is His Gospel we are sharing. He created each seed that we have the privilege to plant. If He doesn’t make it grow, the perfect soil, light and water won’t force the miracle to happen. Our part is to learn as much as we can so that we are prepared when he provides the opportunity to plant a seed in the soil of another soul. Being ready to plant those seeds entails taking the time to know His word, and being close to Him. We may not see results right away, but don’t be fooled. The Holy Spirit is drawing out the roots below the soil. Some seeds will produce beautiful plants, while others may rot in the ground, but we can’t force growth. We do our part, and trust His process for the rest.

HOW TO: COLD START SEEDS



ITEMS REQUIRED:

  • 1 Gallon -Clear- Jug 

  • Exacto knife or Scissors

  • Clean Dirt

  • Water

  • Seeds of your choice

  • White Duct Tape

  • Marker

  • Spoon


*NOTE: Recycling old milk and water jugs are cost effective and easy. I acquired them from family and neighbors. 

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Put holes in the bottom of jugs (roughly the size of a pencil)

  2. Cut/slice jugs horizontally (leaving the handle intact)

  3. Fill bottom portion with dirt

  4. Pour warm water over bottom of now dirt filled jugs until soaked

  5. Let water drain

  6. Mix seeds with a handful of dirt

  7. Sprinkle seed/dirt mixture into jugs

  8. GENTLY press seeds into dirt with the back of a metal spoon

  9. Seal jugs closed with duct tape

  10. Label Jugs

  11. Place Jugs outside in a warm sunny spot and protected from extreme weather

  12. Check on seeds after 2-3 weeks 

  13. Lightly water jugs when top soil is dry


Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Introduction to: Devotions from the Greenhouse.

 

“For as the soil makes the sprout come up
and a garden causes seeds to grow,
so the Sovereign Lord will make righteousness
and praise spring up before all nations.”

(Isaiah, 61:11)


Today marks a new season: It’s the first warm day of May. I brew my coffee, pour a cup into my favorite mug, and add plenty of sweet cream. Then I head out to see who has decided to bravely poke its little green head out of the dirt to say good morning. I walk slowly through the dewy flower beds, enjoying the smell of the dirt mixed with decomposing leaves, and observing any signs of spring foliage. The thing about plants is that you can’t hurry the process; You are forced to yield to time. As Solomon states in the book of Ecclesiastes: “there is a time for everything, and this is a time of growth.”


You can be as frustrated as you want, but flowers bloom on God’s timeline, not yours. So you may as well grab some coffee and enjoy the season one day at a time.

In Oregon, we have a nice long growing season (zone 9a for you gardening nerds) where we get to enjoy beautiful flowers. We enjoy it more because we have just endured 8 long months of a cold, grey, windy, and rainy season. We earn our green state, and when June hits, it’s all been worth the wait. It’s no wonder that the Bible is scattered with plant metaphors and symbolism as they help us learn life lessons and teach us about the Kingdom of heaven.

Waiting for Spring each year is just a taste of the longer patience we exercise as we hope for the beauty of  God’s future promises: “While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, and day and night, shall not cease” (Genesis, 8:22). No matter how patient or dedicated you are, it can be hard to admit that the end result  of gardening is largely out of our control: the weather can surprise us, pests can sneak past our defenses. Sometimes we can do everything right, but that doesn’t ensure that our plants will always thrive. I am often surprised when a seedling that by all rights should have shriveled up and died takes off and astonishes us with gorgeous blooms. 


In my own life, I have times of rain, times of growing, and painful times of pruning. Then there are those sunny days when everything works out just right, my day has blossomed like roses. I would love to take the credit for these beautiful days but just like the flowers in my garden, there is a lot outside of my control. It’s difficult to admit: I don’t know what I need. Philippians 1:6 advises: “He who began a good work in my life will complete it.”. I choose to submit to His work because only He can search my heart and mind. Only He knows what I need to change and grow. To have peace and joy I must trust in the process of the Creator. I must place faith in the Master Gardener of my soul for His provisions: His love, attentiveness, timing, knowledge, and wisdom. The way to find peace is to remember this; That in winter, spring always comes eventually. So when I feel that first warm day, I pour a cup of coffee. I take a stroll through the garden and look for the small signs: That the work He is doing is producing growth. God always keeps His promise and He will not fail to finish what He has started.

Hope Wirta

Monday, August 11, 2025

A Long Winter and The Promise of Spring


            "I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; 

I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you 

a heart of flesh.”

(Ezekiel 36:26)



    Every year I dread the months of January and February. I live in the wettest part of Oregon. I don't mind the rain in fall and spring, it is usually light, warm welcome. However, in January and February it is brutal. The rain comes in with a cold driving wind that cuts through any warm clothing. All the leaves are off the trees, and raked away, the flower beds have been winterized and the grey, dark dreariness of the winter wait sets in.
While I slosh through the pouring rain toward the Greenhouse to prepare for the next Spring planting. I choose seeds, pant them in seedling pots and wait. I wait for seeds to grow, wait for winter to pass, wait for the rain to stop and the sun to come out from behind the clouds; I wait.
Every day I check the seedling, adjust the heat, check water and watch for mold or pests. It is a slow process.
I wait.
Maybe I should find ways to enjoy winter, but my heart longs for the warmth of Spring. I know it eventually will come, just as it has every year, but why does it feel like winter is twice as long as Spring and Summer combined?


Then one morning I see it; The first bud, the first leaf, the evidence that Spring is on the way.


In my day to day life, I don't see a lot of change in my habits and behaviors. It feels like I live in an internal winter, waiting for changes in my heart and behaviors. I have my devotions and pray. I do what I can to walk with the Spirit and not carry out the desires that I know come from my flesh (Galatians 5:16), but these behavioral changes are usually skin deep. It's the Spiritual growth that brings the good fruit of Spring.  Every now and then I get a glimmer of good fruit, I see God use my in a way I did not expect, or I get to introduce someone to the Gospel, and they respond. It's in those times that I know God is doing the work He promised. It is the Spiritual fruit of Spring.
The seasons are a great reminder of the consistency and faithfulness of God. The sun, the seasons, the seeds all do exactly what God designed them to do. If God can perfectly design the universe, then He can also change my heart of stone. He will finish the work He started in me the day I chose to follow Him. 
Satan would like me to doubt God's promises, he would like nothing more than for me to live my life in the cold constant winter state of shame, doubt and fear, never believing that God will bring Spring. 
God reminds me to get into the Greenhouse and prepare, because winter will end and Spring is one the way. When I feel that God is not using me, or old habits and failures try to send me into a shame spiral, I need to get to the word and plant seeds, or spend time praying scripture preparing the soil of my heart for new growth. 
Spring is just around the corner.


How to prepare perennial and annual flower beds for the winter months:

1. Dead head any dying flowers or cut down dead foliage.

2.Remove debris or dead leaves before frost time comes. Leave the base of the plant.

3. Keep the ground moist until it freezes over to keep plants alive until hibernation sets in.

4. Apply mulch in late to mid November (old leaves that you have gathered ahead of time works well)
This will protect the plants in the winter months.

5. For annual flower beds remove the dying plant and decide whether to compost or dispose of them.  Add compost to the ground and wait for Spring. 

Hope Wirta

Flowers with Hope and
Hope's Palette










 




.





Friday, August 8, 2025

God's Garden

 Matthew 6:32  " Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry  about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own."

    I love my backyard. Each year as it get's a little better than the year before. My perennials are maturing and bushing out, I have more experience with placement and care, and I am beginning to get the hang of growing flowers in the greenhouse. It is truly my happy place. It's dirty, sweaty, thorny work, but I love it. 
Then I leave my backyard and go on a hike. I see the lush greenery, the mossy trees and I think, WOW! God is a gardener at heart. I look at the variety of wild flowers and realize, His garden is perfect and basically cares for itself.
When I plant a seed and water it, If conditions are right it grows.  It was perfectly created by God to do what it does. I just get the joy of watching the magical process. God gave me gardening to bring me joy. 
Did God need Adam and Eve to tend to the garden of Eden? I think not. He let him them, because He loved them. He wanted to give them rewarding fun work. 
At times I forget that this garden that I enjoy so much, is beautiful because God made it beautiful. He allows me to play with His wonderful flowers, trees and plants. 

We have the same problem with our day to day lives. We forget who made our days. We get so wrapped up and worried about things that we have absolutely no control over. We spiral into thinking that we can manipulate what will happen obsessing it into being. We "water" the seeds we want, but we don't make them grow. We lose countless hours of peace and joy by ignoring God's wisdom and imperatives. 
Cast your cares on me (literally throw them!!) I am the one who make flowers (or plans) grow.

Fear Not!
Do not worry about.....
Be anxious for nothing!

We have disillusioned ourselves into believing that after God created the universe it somehow got our of His control and into ours. Our disillusions of grandeur are a lie of Satan. 
Don't be deceived. 
Trust the truth you know.

To trust like a child is to be in awe of our Father. He is right there beside you ALWAYS watching your steps.
Luke 18:17 “Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.” 
Matthew 6:25-32
“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes?  Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? 
 Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life[e]?
“And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these.  If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith?  So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ 

 For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them.
 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.



Starting Seeds: Paper Towel Method

The paper towel (or coffee filter) method of starting seeds works great for large seeds, or hard shell seeds. It is not optimal for small seeds as they may not have the strength to root this way.

  • Soak you seeds for 24 hours in hot water
  • Place a paper towel in a strainer and strain out the water.
  • We a paper towel and gently move seeds on to the new paper towel.
  • Fold the paper towel over once, make sure it is moist all the way through.
  • Place the paper towel in a baggie, squeeze our access air and place in a warm sunny place to germinate for 2-3 days.
  • Using tweezers transplant rooted seeds to starter tray or pots, water and watch them grow.












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