{"id":1644,"date":"2011-04-01T05:37:32","date_gmt":"2011-04-01T10:37:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.thelifeliterary.com\/?p=1644"},"modified":"2011-04-01T05:38:11","modified_gmt":"2011-04-01T10:38:11","slug":"the-healing-green-of-sprouts-under-lights","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.thelifeliterary.com\/?p=1644","title":{"rendered":"The Healing Green of Sprouts Under Lights"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>March 13, 2010<\/p>\n<p>I moved the lights up one link in the chain  that suspends it over the beautiful, green, increasingly lush young  plants.\u00a0 Twelve one inch high smokey green cabbage plants stand on the  far right side.\u00a0 Each plant&#8217;s two true leaves and two cotyledons fan out  at the 90 degree points of their axis, the tiny but amazingly sturdy  stem that supports them.\u00a0 Next, twelve cells  with truly infant buttercrunch lettuce.\u00a0 I was disappointed that this,  my favorite variety of lettuce sprouted so anemically the first  planting, though in a way I have only myself to blame.\u00a0 I used last  year&#8217;s seeds, plus I fully covered them with soil.\u00a0 The first sin isn&#8217;t  so bad: some of that seed germinated, though my re-planting is with this  year&#8217;s seed.\u00a0 The second sin, well, I&#8217;m not sure how bad it is, except  the instructions on the packet and other things I&#8217;ve read say lettuce  seeds need light to germinate.\u00a0 The first planting has some true leaves,  the second, racing to catch up with its big brothers, has just  emerged.\u00a0 The next rank of twelve cells holds a dozen red leaf lettuce  seedlings.\u00a0 Though the seed leaves are mostly green, they are tinged and  ringed with a reddish hue.\u00a0 I can hardly wait for more true leaves to push up  and out.<\/p>\n<p><!--more-->Next are twenty four cells with Latuca sativa also known  as Ithaca Lettuce.\u00a0 These have grown from last year&#8217;s seeds, one each  of which I planted in each cell.\u00a0 Ironic that 23 out of 24 sprouted.\u00a0  Ironic that they are the healthiest, most vigorous of the seedlings I am  growing.\u00a0 Ironic because this is an iceberg type head lettuce, our  least favorite type.\u00a0 My hope is that a home-grown head of lettuce will  be tastier and crispier than the waxy-crisp, almost tasteless grocery  iceberg lettuce.\u00a0 These all have two good-looking, green, true leaves with  a third on the way.\u00a0 Glancing over descriptions of this lettuce, it  doesn&#8217;t seem too hard to grow, and my timing should be perfect: mid  February planting for a late April, early May harvest.\u00a0 I like this nice  Virginia weather that lets me set cool weather plants out early and be  done with them in plenty of time for summer plants to follow.\u00a0 I had  originally thought I&#8217;d have two waves of indoor grown plants, but I may  try a third planting after setting out tomatoes and peppers.<\/p>\n<p>After  the Ithaca, there are twelve cells of healthy but overly leggy bok  choi, a sort of Chinese cabbage.\u00a0 For the life of me I can&#8217;t understand  why they are so long and spindly while the cabbage at the other end of the flat is  compact and healthy.\u00a0 Writing this now, I wonder if I should give up on  the bok choi and plant something else in those cells, like chard, but  I&#8217;m going to stick it out, plant them early, and not hope for much.<\/p>\n<p>I treasure how this small but growing sea of green in my  living room under the grow light is like therapy for me.\u00a0 I have always  had a sense of spring green soothing and healing, like a cup of  chamomile tea.\u00a0 Allowing new green to flow into me, through my eyes,  coursing through my whole being, gives me a sense of satisfaction.\u00a0 This is  spiritual and emotional health: to dream to plan, to plant, to nurture, to  act on the deep husbanding impulses and even now, eyes feasting on the  green, to be succored.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>March 13, 2010 I moved the lights up one link in the chain that suspends it over the beautiful, green, increasingly lush young plants.\u00a0 Twelve one inch high smokey green cabbage plants stand on the far right side.\u00a0 Each plant&#8217;s &hellip; 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