For people who would like to do more gardening but live
in a short growing season area, a hobby greenhouse is the answer.
A hobby greenhouse is not large enough to produce vegetables or flowers
on a commercial basis. It will, however, give you a place for a
tomato plant or two and some fresh greens even if you live in the
northern regions. Greenhouse enthusiasts even have their own
association, called the Hobby Greenhouse Association, which publishes a
quarterly magazine. The organization also sponsers events and
helps individuals connect to get help with the aspect of gardening that
they are interested in, whether it's growing cacti or saving seeds.
If
you are in the market for a hobby greenhouse, there are several types
on the market. The smallest type is not large enough to walk into
and must be accessed from the outside. It resembles an
old-fashioned phone booth made all of glass and outfitted with
shelves. This type is designed to fit as many plants as possible
in as small a place as possible. The shelves are made of glass to
allow as much light as possible to reach plants on the lower
shelves. Another inexpensive version of this sort of hobby
greenhouse is shelving covered with a zippered tent of clear
plastic. This sort of arrangement is great for the small-scale
hobby gardener wanting a place to keep her flowers or houseplant starts.
There
are a variety of designs of hobby greenhouse that are large enough to
walk into but made entirely of clear glass or plastic. They are
often about the same size as a small storage building. Some
independent builders have started making these to sell locally.
Among national brands, one of the nicest is called the "Solar
Prism." It is called this because of it's unique
construction. This hobby greenhouse is made of a single piece of
durable clear plastic which is designed to work like tiny prisms side
by side. They trap the rays of the sun and shoot them back into
the greenhouse at all angles. For this reason, these little
greenhouses are said to glow when the weather is cloudy.
Better
hobby greenhouses are equipped with automatic sensors that open vents
which allow ventilation and keep the interior temperatures from getting
too high. These are a great labor saver, but can get
expensive. Another benefit sometimes found in nicer greenhouses
is a built in irrigation or misting system. Members of the Hobby
Greenhouse Association, or HGA, have invented many interesting designs
of greenhouses.
If gardening is your hobby, greenhouse growing
will interest you. With a greenhouse, you can have the earliest
tomatoes and salad greens all year. You can also start seedlings
for the main garden early in the spring when outdoor temperatures would
kill them. A hobby greenhouse can be a good investment...