Agent-almanac plan-garden-calendar
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/i18n/caveman-lite/skills/plan-garden-calendar" ~/.claude/skills/pjt222-agent-almanac-plan-garden-calendar && rm -rf "$T"
i18n/caveman-lite/skills/plan-garden-calendar/SKILL.mdPlan Garden Calendar
Plan garden activities using solar, lunar, and biodynamic calendar systems for optimal timing.
When to Use
- You are planning a new growing season and need a planting schedule
- You want to integrate lunar or biodynamic timing into your garden practice
- You need to calculate frost dates and planting windows for your zone
- You want to set up succession planting for continuous harvest
- End-of-season review and planning for the next year
Inputs
- Required: USDA hardiness zone or geographic location (for frost dates)
- Required: Crops or plants to schedule
- Optional: Calendar system preference (solar only, lunar, or biodynamic)
- Optional: Garden size and bed count
- Optional: Previous season's garden journal
Procedure
Step 1: Establish the Solar Framework
The solar calendar provides the hard boundaries — frost dates and day length.
Solar Calendar Anchors: 1. Find your USDA Hardiness Zone: - Zone determines minimum winter temperature and which perennials survive - Also correlates with growing season length - Look up at: planthardiness.ars.usda.gov (US) or local equivalent 2. Determine frost dates: - Last spring frost (LSF): Date after which frost is unlikely (50% threshold) - First autumn frost (FAF): Date after which frost becomes likely - Growing season = FAF minus LSF (in days) Example (Zone 7b, mid-Atlantic US): - Last spring frost: April 15 - First autumn frost: October 15 - Growing season: ~180 days 3. Anchor seasonal milestones: ┌───────────────────┬───────────────┬────────────────────────────┐ │ Event │ Approx. Date │ Garden Significance │ ├───────────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────────┤ │ Winter solstice │ Dec 21 │ Seed ordering, planning │ │ Spring equinox │ Mar 20 │ Start indoor seeds (cool │ │ │ │ crops: 6-8 wk before LSF) │ │ Last spring frost │ Zone-specific │ Direct sow tender crops │ │ Summer solstice │ Jun 21 │ Peak day length, begin │ │ │ │ autumn crop planning │ │ Autumn equinox │ Sep 22 │ Harvest season, cover crop │ │ First autumn frost│ Zone-specific │ Protect or harvest tender │ │ │ │ crops before this date │ └───────────────────┴───────────────┴────────────────────────────┘
Expected: Clear frost dates and growing season length for your specific location.
On failure: If frost dates are unknown, use conservative estimates (add 2 weeks to average LSF for safe direct-sow date). Local garden clubs or agricultural extension offices are the best regional sources.
Step 2: Overlay the Lunar Calendar
The moon influences sap flow, germination, and soil biology. Two cycles matter.
Lunar Cycle 1: Synodic (Phase Cycle — 29.5 days) ┌─────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Phase │ Garden Activity │ ├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ New Moon → 1st Qtr │ Plant leafy crops (lettuce, spinach, │ │ (Waxing crescent) │ cabbage). Sap rises — good for above- │ │ │ ground vegetative growth. │ ├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ 1st Qtr → Full Moon │ Plant fruiting crops (tomato, pepper, │ │ (Waxing gibbous) │ beans, squash). Strong light + rising sap │ │ │ = vigorous above-ground growth. │ ├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Full Moon → 3rd Qtr │ Plant root crops (carrot, beet, potato, │ │ (Waning gibbous) │ onion). Sap descends — energy moves to │ │ │ roots. Good for transplanting. │ ├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ 3rd Qtr → New Moon │ Rest period. No planting. Good for: │ │ (Waning crescent) │ weeding, composting, soil preparation, │ │ │ pruning, harvesting for storage. │ └─────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────┘ Lunar Cycle 2: Sidereal (Ascending/Descending — ~27.3 days) - Ascending moon (moon moves higher in sky each night): Sap rises in plants. Good for: grafting, taking cuttings, harvesting fruit and aerial parts, sowing above-ground crops - Descending moon (moon moves lower in sky each night): Sap descends to roots. Good for: planting, transplanting, root pruning, applying soil preparations, planting root crops Note: Ascending/descending is NOT the same as waxing/waning. Ascending = moon's position in the zodiac moving northward. Check a biodynamic calendar for daily ascending/descending status.
Expected: Understanding of both lunar cycles and their garden applications.
On failure: If lunar calendar feels overwhelming, start with just the synodic cycle (waxing = above-ground, waning = below-ground) and add the sidereal layer in the second season.
Step 3: Integrate the Biodynamic Calendar (Optional — Advanced)
The Maria Thun biodynamic calendar assigns each day to one of four plant organs based on the moon's zodiacal position.
Biodynamic Day Types: ┌───────────┬─────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Day Type │ Zodiac Signs │ Favoured Activities │ ├───────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Root │ Taurus, Virgo, │ Sow/transplant root crops (carrot, │ │ │ Capricorn │ beet, potato). Soil cultivation. │ │ │ (Earth signs) │ Compost turning. │ ├───────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Leaf │ Cancer, Scorpio,│ Sow/transplant leafy greens. Water │ │ │ Pisces │ plants. Lawn care. Prune for growth. │ │ │ (Water signs) │ │ ├───────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Flower │ Gemini, Libra, │ Sow/transplant flowering plants. │ │ │ Aquarius │ Harvest flowers and herbs. Apply │ │ │ (Air signs) │ preparation 501 (horn silica). │ ├───────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Fruit │ Aries, Leo, │ Sow/transplant fruiting crops │ │ │ Sagittarius │ (tomato, pepper, bean). Harvest │ │ │ (Fire signs) │ fruit. Collect seed. │ └───────────┴─────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────┘ Using the Calendar: 1. Obtain the current year's Maria Thun biodynamic calendar (published annually, available from biodynamic associations) 2. Note which days are root/leaf/flower/fruit 3. Schedule your plantings to align day type with crop type 4. Avoid planting on "unfavourable" days (perigee, node crossings) 5. Combine with synodic phase: e.g., plant carrots on a root day during waning moon for strongest root growth signal Practical Reality: - Perfect alignment (right phase + right day type + good weather + you're free) happens 2-3 times per month. Don't wait for perfection. - Match at least ONE calendar layer. Matching two is good. Three is ideal. - Weather and your schedule always override calendar — a plant in the ground on the "wrong" day beats a seed in the packet on the "right" day.
Expected: Awareness of biodynamic day types and how to use the annual calendar.
On failure: If biodynamic calendar is unavailable, the lunar phase calendar (Step 2) captures the most important timing signals. Add biodynamic day types when you have access to the annual calendar.
Step 4: Build a Succession Planting Schedule
Stagger plantings for continuous harvest rather than one overwhelming glut.
Succession Planting Principles: 1. Same crop, staggered sowing: - Sow lettuce every 2 weeks from LSF to 8 weeks before FAF - Sow bush beans every 3 weeks from 2 weeks after LSF to 10 weeks before FAF - Sow radish every 2 weeks (spring and autumn — skip midsummer heat) 2. Different crops, same bed: - Spring: peas (harvest June) → Summer: beans (harvest Sept) → Autumn: garlic (harvest next June) - This is relay planting — each crop follows the previous with minimal gap 3. Example Succession Calendar (Zone 7b): ┌─────────┬────────────────┬───────────────────────────────┐ │ Week │ Sow Indoors │ Direct Sow / Transplant │ ├─────────┼────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤ │ Feb 15 │ Tomato, pepper │ │ │ Mar 1 │ Brassica starts│ Peas, spinach (under cloche) │ │ Mar 15 │ Lettuce #1 │ Radish #1, carrots (early) │ │ Apr 1 │ Lettuce #2 │ Radish #2, beet #1 │ │ Apr 15 │ │ Transplant brassicas out │ │ May 1 │ Lettuce #3 │ Bean #1, squash, cucumber │ │ May 15 │ │ Transplant tomato, pepper │ │ Jun 1 │ │ Bean #2, lettuce #4 (shade) │ │ Jun 15 │ │ Bean #3 │ │ Jul 1 │ Autumn brassica│ Beet #2, carrot (autumn) │ │ Jul 15 │ │ Transplant autumn brassicas │ │ Aug 1 │ │ Lettuce #5 (autumn), radish #3 │ │ Aug 15 │ │ Spinach (autumn), cover crop │ │ Sep 1 │ │ Garlic (plant 4-6 wks pre FAF)│ └─────────┴────────────────┴───────────────────────────────┘
Expected: A week-by-week planting calendar customized to your zone, with succession intervals noted.
On failure: If the schedule feels overwhelming, pick your 3 most important crops and plan successions for those only. Add more crops in the second season once the rhythm is established.
Step 5: Seasonal Task Schedule
Beyond planting, the garden has cyclical maintenance tasks.
Seasonal Task Framework: ┌───────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Season │ Tasks │ ├───────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Winter │ - Order seeds (January) │ │ (Dec-Feb) │ - Plan beds and crop rotation on paper │ │ │ - Maintain tools (see maintain-hand-tools) │ │ │ - Apply prep 500 if ground is workable (late Feb) │ │ │ - Start earliest indoor seeds (Feb, 8-10 wk pre LSF)│ ├───────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Spring │ - Soil assessment and amendment (see prepare-soil) │ │ (Mar-May) │ - Direct sow cool crops after soil reaches 7°C │ │ │ - Transplant warm crops after LSF │ │ │ - Mulch beds after soil warms │ │ │ - First compost turn of the year │ ├───────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Summer │ - Succession sow every 2-3 weeks │ │ (Jun-Aug) │ - Water deeply, less frequently (morning preferred) │ │ │ - Harvest regularly to encourage production │ │ │ - Start autumn crop seeds indoors (July) │ │ │ - Apply prep 501 on fruit days (biodynamic) │ ├───────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Autumn │ - Main harvest and preservation │ │ (Sep-Nov) │ - Plant garlic (4-6 weeks before FAF) │ │ │ - Sow cover crops on empty beds │ │ │ - Apply prep 500 (late October) │ │ │ - Compost final additions, insulate pile for winter │ │ │ - End-of-season reflection (meditate checkpoint) │ └───────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Expected: A seasonal framework that complements the weekly planting schedule.
On failure: If tasks are consistently missed, the schedule may be too ambitious. Reduce the number of beds or crops until the rhythm feels sustainable.
Step 6: Meditate Checkpoint — End-of-Season Reflection
At the close of the growing season (after first frost), sit with the garden journal.
End-of-Season Reflection (20-30 minutes): 1. Find a quiet spot in or overlooking the garden 2. Bring your garden journal and this year's calendar 3. Review without judgment: - What grew well? (Note varieties and planting dates) - What struggled? (Was it timing, soil, weather, or neglect?) - Which calendar alignments felt meaningful? - What surprised you? 4. Note three things to carry forward: - One success to repeat - One failure to investigate - One new thing to try 5. Close the journal. Sit quietly for 5 minutes. The garden is resting now. You should rest too. Planning begins after solstice — not before. This reflection becomes the first page of next year's plan.
Expected: A reflective summary that grounds next year's planning in this year's reality.
On failure: If reflection feels like self-criticism, reframe: the garden is the teacher. Every "failure" is data. The only real failure is not observing.
Validation Checklist
- USDA zone and frost dates identified for your location
- Solar calendar anchors marked (equinoxes, solstices, frost dates)
- Lunar cycle understood (at minimum: waxing/waning = above/below ground)
- Planting schedule built with succession intervals
- Schedule accounts for indoor start times (weeks before LSF)
- Seasonal task framework adapted to local conditions
- Garden journal started or updated with this year's calendar
- Meditate checkpoint completed at end of growing season
Common Pitfalls
- Planting too early: Eager spring planting into cold soil wastes seeds. Soil temperature matters more than air temperature — use a soil thermometer
- Ignoring microclimates: South-facing walls are warmer, low spots collect frost. Your garden has zones within zones
- Calendar rigidity: The calendar is a guide, not a command. If the weather is wrong, wait. Plants don't read calendars
- No succession planting: A single large sowing produces a single overwhelming harvest followed by nothing. Stagger for continuity
- Skipping the reflection: Without reviewing what happened, you plan from hope instead of evidence. The journal is the most important tool
- Over-scheduling: A packed calendar leads to burnout. Leave breathing room — the garden will fill it
Related Skills
— Observation skills that inform calendar adjustments mid-seasonread-garden
— Soil amendment timing depends on the seasonal calendarprepare-soil
— Bonsai seasonal care follows the same solar/lunar frameworkcultivate-bonsai
— End-of-season reflection checkpoint (full protocol)meditate
— Winter tool care is a scheduled seasonal taskmaintain-hand-tools