Starting My Summer Garden in Maryland (Inside My Garage with a Greenhouse)

After nine months of living in Elkton, I’m starting to settle in. One of the things I was most excited about this year was starting a garden.

For my birthday, my dad and brother gave me a small portable greenhouse. I set it up in the garage with a heater and grow lights so I could get a head start on my seedlings while the weather is still unpredictable outside.

Right now, my little greenhouse is full of tiny sprouts and seed trays. It’s still early in the season, but something is exciting about watching the first green shoots appear and knowing they’ll eventually make their way into the garden this summer.

A Budget-Friendly Seed Starting Hack

When I started prepping seeds for my summer garden here in Elkton, I quickly realized how expensive all the seed-starting supplies can get, especially since I left all of my gardening supplies and original greenhouse back in Lake Tahoe. And starting over, all my supplies costs have been adding up, so those plastic seedling trays with humidity domes add up fast!

Instead of buying the traditional trays, I found a much cheaper solution hack. I bought disposable aluminum baking sheet pans with lids from Walmart instead. They work surprisingly well as mini greenhouses and cost only a fraction of what the plastic seed trays do.

Inside the pans, I’m using a soil blocker tool that creates four 2-inch soil cubes at a time. It’s actually a really cool little tool. Instead of plastic cells, the seedlings grow directly in the compact soil cubes, which makes transplanting much easier later.

The aluminum pans hold the cubes perfectly, and the clear lids help keep moisture in while the seedlings are getting started. It’s a simple setup, but it’s working great so far in my small garage greenhouse.

My Small Garage Greenhouse Setup

The little greenhouse itself is set up right in the garage with a heater and grow lights to keep everything warm and give the seedlings the light they need.

Even though it’s a small setup, it’s working surprisingly well. The grow lights keep the seedlings from getting leggy, and the heater helps maintain a steady temperature during the colder nights.

It’s not fancy, but sometimes the simplest setups work just fine.

Looking Ahead to Summer

If all goes well, these tiny seedlings will eventually be transplanted out into the garden once the warmer weather finally settles in here in Maryland.

Right now, they may only be little green sprouts, but with a bit of patience, they’ll hopefully turn into a full summer garden.

For now, I’ll just keep checking on them each day and watching them grow. Living here in Elkton has been a bit of an adjustment after spending so many years out west in the Sierra Mountains. The climate is VERY different, the growing season is longer, and I’m still learning what grows best here in Maryland.

Starting seeds this year feels a little like starting over in more ways than one. I’m rebuilding my gardening supplies, figuring out the local seasons, and slowly learning how gardening works in this part of the country.

For now, my small garage greenhouse is a good place to begin. Watching these tiny seedlings grow is a reminder that new beginnings often start small.


Support the Journey – If this post resonated with you or made you feel a little less alone on your own path, you’re always welcome to support my writing with a cup of coffee. Your kindness helps me keep sharing real stories and new chapters, one step at a time go to: coff.ee/smalltownmichele

Letting Go, Holding On, and Hoping for the Best

When we left for Maryland, we had to leave Alex’s car behind. The engine had a knocking sound, and the dealership service department told us point blank: “It’s not going to make it across the country.” So we made a tough decision and left the car behind, hoping my dad could sell it.

But life is funny. Over the last few weeks, both my dad and my brother drove the car around town. The knocking sound? Gone. Just like that, the thing we thought was finished suddenly had a little more life left in it.

Now, the car is finally on a transport truck headed our way, and we’re hoping to have it by the end of the month. It’s a huge weight off my chest.

I’ve been so stressed about how I’d get another car for Alex in time for college. Her classes start at the end of August, and without that car, I honestly don’t know what we would’ve done. I’m not working yet, and if I do get a job, there’s no way I can drive her to school every day and make it work.

So much of this move has been built on trust, trusting that things will work out, even if I don’t know how yet. We left more than just that car behind. I left furniture, memories, routines… and a lot of my heart in Tahoe. But slowly, little pieces of our old life are finding their way to us again, reminding me that even in all this change, we’re still being carried.


☕ Support the Journey

If this post resonated with you or made you feel a little less alone on your own path, you’re always welcome to support my writing with a cup of coffee. Your kindness helps me keep sharing real stories and new chapters, one step at a time: 👉 coff.ee/smalltownmichele