User
Write something
Pinned
🚨 It’s LIVE: Seedling Mix Calculator🌱
If you’ve ever stood over a tote like… “okay but how much perlite is too much?” 😅 this one’s for you. ✅ Plug in your container size + how many you’re filling ✅ It spits out the exact gallons (and easy units if you want) ✅ Peat vs coco is built in (lime math included) 👉 Use it here: [Seedling Soil Mix Calculator – Wisconsin Homestead] If you try it, comment what you’re planting first (tomatoes? peppers? herbs?) 👇🌿 If you have improvement ideas, please let me know.
Pinned
🌱 Healing in the Garden: Growing Hope Through My Dad’s Gastric Cancer Journey
I never expected my next garden to start with a diagnosis. A few months ago, my dad was told he has stage 3 gastric cancer — a sentence that hits like a shovel to the gut. Since then, he’s been going through chemo to try to shrink it. The days are long, and the side effects are no joke. But through it all, he said something that changed everything: “I think I want to start a garden here.” That moment stopped me. It wasn’t just about planting seeds… it was about planting hope. So this is where our new chapter begins — a healing garden in my dad’s yard. A space where every shovel of soil, every tiny sprout, and every harvest will mean something more. I’ll be sharing the process here — not just how we build the garden, but what we plant and why. We’ll focus on foods that are gentle on digestion, herbs that support the body during recovery, and flowers that lift the spirit when chemo days feel endless. 🌼 This isn’t just about growing food — it’s about growing resilience. About finding peace in the soil when life feels out of control. If you’ve ever watched someone fight cancer… or if you’ve used gardening as your own kind of therapy… I’d love to hear from you. 💬 Maybe this Skool community can become more than a space for homesteading — maybe it can be where healing, hope, and hands in the dirt all meet. Stay rooted, Brian 💬 Join the Conversation What would you plant in a healing garden? 🌿Something soothing like chamomile or lemon balm? Or a hardy veggie that symbolizes strength?
Pinned
🌱 Welcome to Sprouted Rooted Recipes 🌱
🌱 Welcome to Sprouted Rooted Recipes 🌱 Hey there, fellow grower! I’m so glad you found your way here. This little corner is where dirt-under-the-nails gardeners and homestead dreamers can connect, swap stories, and cheer each other on. My hope is simple: that this space feels like a friendly garden gate you can lean on—where we talk seedlings, soil, and all the wild experiments that make gardening fun. 🌻 👉 Take a second to introduce yourself! - Where are you gardening (state or zone)? - What’s your favorite plant (or one you’ve always wanted to grow)? - What brought you to this community? Don’t be shy—this group is all about learning together. No matter your level, your voice matters here. Pull up a chair (or a trowel) and let’s grow something amazing together. 🌿 Brian - Sprouting Homestead 🌼 Community Roots (Rules) 🌼 Every healthy garden has boundaries, and this one’s no different. Here’s how we keep our soil rich: 1. Respect each other 🌎 – Kindness first, always. 2. No spam or hard selling 🚫 – This is a safe place to share, not a marketplace. 3. Questions are gold 💡 – There’s no “too basic” here. If you’re wondering, someone else is too. 4. Share your own story 🌱 – Wins, fails, experiments—all welcome. 5. Help each other grow 🤝 – Encourage, support, and pass along the tips you’ve learned. If we stick to these simple roots, this space will thrive like a well-mulched garden bed.
🌱 The Milk/Water Jug Experiment Sprouted…
So this year… I decided to try something I’ve never done before 👀 I’ve seen people talk about winter sowing in milk jugs, but I’ve never actually committed to it. Until now. So I grabbed a few jugs, cut them open, filled them with soil… and planted some seeds like little time capsules waiting for spring 🌱 Now they’re sitting outside doing their thing — going through the cold, the sun, the moisture… basically handling life on their own. And honestly? I have no idea what’s going to happen 😂 But that’s kind of the fun of it. Seeing those tiny green sprouts inside already has me thinking this might be one of those “why didn’t I do this sooner?” moments. If this works… this might be a game changer for starting plants without babysitting trays inside. 👉 Anyone else ever try milk jug growing before? 👉 What did you plant in yours?
0
0
🌱 The Milk/Water Jug Experiment Sprouted…
🌶️ Pepper Update: “I Cooked My Plants”
Alright… pepper update. And uh… We had an incident. So everything was going great. Seeds popped.Plants were growing.I was feeling like a responsible plant parent. Then I made one small mistake… I trusted the grow light a little too much. Turns out… Pepper seedlings + too-close grow light = tiny plant barbecue 🔥 Yeah… I crisped a couple of them. Not full destruction… but definitely enough for them to be like: “Hey… what was that???” What happened: - Light was a little too close - Leaves started getting that “crispy edge / faded look” - A few seedlings basically said “we’re out” What I learned (the hard way): - Peppers are tough… but not THAT tough 😂 - Light distance matters - “More light” is NOT always better The good news: Most of them are still doing great 🙌 And honestly? This is part of it. You don’t learn gardening by doing everything right… You learn it by slightly roasting your plants and adjusting 😅 Current setup changes: - Raised the light a bit - Keeping a closer eye on leaf color - Letting them recover instead of panicking Real talk: Nobody posts this part. But this is the part that actually makes you better. So if you’ve ever: - Overwatered - Burned plants - Forgotten something Congrats. You’re officially a gardener. If anyone else has accidentally cooked their seedlings before… Please tell me I’m not alone 😂🔥
🌶️  Pepper Update: “I Cooked My Plants”
1-15 of 15
powered by
Sprouting Rooted Recipes
skool.com/garden-4952
Grow your garden, craft your remedies, and level up your homestead life — one quest at a time.
Build your own community
Bring people together around your passion and get paid.
Powered by