Spring seed swap: list what you have and what you hope to grow
Please include region, germination notes, and whether you can mail packets this month.
WeGet Garden
Share balcony layouts, soil notes, seed-saving logs, pest questions, and local harvest calendars with gardeners who like practical detail.
Growers are listing regional varieties, germination notes, and mailing windows for spring swaps.
ClinicCompost ratios, drainage fixes, mulch choices, and test results from container gardeners.
Watch listMembers are comparing photos, organic controls, and when to isolate affected plants.
Season logWhat ripened early, what stalled, and which varieties earned another square foot next season.
Local habitatMembers compare pollinator-friendly varieties, local nurseries, and transplant timing.
Water watchBalcony timers, raised-bed drip lines, drought routines, and container moisture checks.
Bloom logZinnias, cosmos, dahlias, succession sowing, and what actually lasts in a vase.
Gear shelfCompact tools, pruners, trellis clips, meters, and repairs for small-space gardeners.
Please include region, germination notes, and whether you can mail packets this month.
My plants are healthy, but the lower leaves stay damp after every morning watering.
The bed grew heavy feeders last year, and I want to avoid overloading it with nitrogen.
Mint survives, basil struggles, and I am looking for something useful for weekday cooking.
I isolated the container, but I am unsure whether neem or soap is the gentler first move.
The beans are ready to climb, but every store-bought frame feels too light for this railing.
My lettuce looks great, but I am trying to avoid soft growth before the next heat wave.
I added too many fruit scraps last week and need help rebalancing browns without drying it out.
I want pollinator value, but the site gets reflected heat and only partial evening water.
The herbs dry out fast while the pepper pot stays wet; I may need separate zones.
I have one sunny rectangle and want blooms from early summer through first frost.
The cheap probe says everything is wet, but the basil is clearly asking for water.
The plant grew faster for two weeks, then the newest leaves started curling inward.