MCP HubMCP Hub
Retour aux compétences

plan-garden-calendar

pjt222
Mis à jour 2 days ago
7 vues
17
2
17
Voir sur GitHub
Designdesign

À propos

Cette Compétence Claude aide les développeurs à créer des calendriers de plantation en intégrant les cycles solaires, lunaires et biodynamiques. Elle calcule les périodes optimales en utilisant les dates de gel, les phases lunaires et les repères saisonniers pour des tâches comme la plantation en succession. Utilisez-la pour générer des plans saisonniers ou pour examiner les fenêtres de récolte basées sur des règles complexes de timing agricole.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/plan-garden-calendar

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Plan Garden Calendar

Plan garden via solar, lunar, biodynamic calendars → optimal timing.

Use When

  • New season → need planting schedule
  • Integrate lunar or biodynamic timing
  • Calc frost dates + planting windows for zone
  • Setup succession planting → continuous harvest
  • End-of-season review → next year

In

  • Required: USDA hardiness zone or geo location (for frost dates)
  • Required: Crops/plants to schedule
  • Optional: Calendar preference (solar only, lunar, biodynamic)
  • Optional: Garden size + bed count
  • Optional: Prior season journal

Do

Step 1: Solar Framework

Solar calendar = hard boundaries → frost dates + 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     │
   └───────────────────┴───────────────┴────────────────────────────┘

→ Clear frost dates + growing season length for location.

If err: frost dates unknown → conservative estimate (add 2 wks to avg LSF for safe direct-sow). Local garden clubs / ag extension = best regional sources.

Step 2: Overlay Lunar Calendar

Moon influences sap flow, germination, 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.

→ Both lunar cycles + garden applications understood.

If err: lunar feels overwhelming → start w/ synodic only (waxing = above-ground, waning = below-ground), add sidereal in season 2.

Step 3: Biodynamic Calendar (Optional — Advanced)

Maria Thun calendar → each day = one of 4 plant organs based on moon zodiac.

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.

→ Biodynamic day types + annual calendar usage clear.

If err: biodynamic calendar unavailable → lunar phase (Step 2) captures most timing signals. Add biodynamic later when accessible.

Step 4: Succession Planting Schedule

Stagger plantings → continuous harvest, not one 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)│
   └─────────┴────────────────┴───────────────────────────────┘

→ Week-by-week planting calendar customized to zone, succession intervals noted.

If err: schedule overwhelming → pick top 3 crops, plan only those. Add more in season 2 once rhythm steady.

Step 5: Seasonal Task Schedule

Beyond planting → 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)     │
└───────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

→ Seasonal framework complementing weekly planting schedule.

If err: tasks consistently missed → too ambitious. Reduce beds/crops until rhythm sustainable.

Step 6: Meditate Checkpoint — End-of-Season Reflection

End of season (after first frost) → sit w/ 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.

→ Reflective summary grounds next year's planning in this year's reality.

If err: reflection feels like self-criticism → reframe: garden is teacher. Every "failure" = data. Only real failure = not observing.

Check

  • USDA zone + frost dates ID'd for location
  • Solar anchors marked (equinoxes, solstices, frost dates)
  • Lunar cycle understood (min: waxing/waning = above/below ground)
  • Planting schedule w/ succession intervals
  • Schedule accounts for indoor start times (weeks pre-LSF)
  • Seasonal task framework adapted to local
  • Garden journal started or updated
  • Meditate checkpoint done at end of growing season

Traps

  1. Plant too early: Eager spring planting in cold soil → wasted seed. Soil temp > air temp — use thermometer.
  2. Ignore microclimates: South walls warmer, low spots collect frost. Garden has zones within zones.
  3. Calendar rigidity: Calendar = guide, not command. Wrong weather → wait. Plants don't read calendars.
  4. No succession: One big sowing → one big glut, then nothing. Stagger.
  5. Skip reflection: No review → plan from hope, not evidence. Journal = most important tool.
  6. Over-schedule: Packed calendar → burnout. Leave breathing room — garden fills it.

  • read-garden — observation skills informing mid-season adjustments
  • prepare-soil — soil amendment timing depends on seasonal calendar
  • cultivate-bonsai — bonsai seasonal care follows same solar/lunar framework
  • meditate — end-of-season reflection (full protocol)
  • maintain-hand-tools — winter tool care = scheduled seasonal task

Dépôt GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Chemin: i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/plan-garden-calendar
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

Compétences associées

executing-plans

Design

Utilisez la compétence executing-plans lorsque vous disposez d'un plan de mise en œuvre complet à exécuter par lots contrôlés avec des points de contrôle de revue. Elle charge et examine le plan de manière critique, puis exécute les tâches par petits lots (3 tâches par défaut) tout en rapportant la progression entre chaque lot pour une revue par l'architecte. Cela garantit une mise en œuvre systématique avec des points de contrôle de qualité intégrés.

Voir la compétence

requesting-code-review

Design

Cette compétence délègue un sous-agent réviseur de code pour analyser les modifications apportées au code par rapport aux exigences avant de poursuivre. Elle doit être utilisée après avoir terminé des tâches, implémenté des fonctionnalités majeures, ou avant une fusion vers la branche principale. La revue aide à détecter précocement les problèmes en comparant l'implémentation actuelle avec le plan initial.

Voir la compétence

connect-mcp-server

Design

Cette compétence fournit un guide complet permettant aux développeurs de connecter des serveurs MCP à Claude Code via les transports HTTP, stdio ou SSE. Elle couvre l'installation, la configuration, l'authentification et la sécurité pour intégrer des services externes tels que GitHub, Notion et des API personnalisées. Utilisez-la lors de la configuration d'intégrations MCP, de la configuration d'outils externes ou du travail avec le Protocole de Contexte de Modèle de Claude.

Voir la compétence

web-cli-teleport

Design

Cette compétence aide les développeurs à choisir entre les interfaces Web et CLI de Claude Code en fonction de l'analyse des tâches, puis permet une téléportation transparente des sessions entre ces environnements. Elle optimise le flux de travail en gérant l'état et le contexte de la session lors du passage entre le web, la CLI ou le mobile. Utilisez-la pour des projets complexes nécessitant différents outils à diverses étapes.

Voir la compétence