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    The Farmer Diaries

    Texas farmer rebounds from bum summer crop with well laid game plan for fall

    Marshall Hinsley
    Marshall Hinsley
    Aug 9, 2015 | 3:00 pm

    In March, I predicted that 2015 would be a good year for gardens; I was wrong.

    I thought the snow and rain earlier in the year would recharge the soil in Texas with moisture. I didn't know we'd have nearly nonstop rain in much of the state for three months afterward. Where I farm, the floodwater prevented me from working the soil or sowing crops until June. Missing the temperate months of April and May was a setback for melons, tomatoes, peppers, squash and everything else.

    That makes my fall planting all the more important. Now's the time to prepare for all the crops that can grow through the fall, winter and into next spring. My agenda for this last full month of summer has a few tasks to keep fresh produce coming in.

    Starting Transplants
    It's difficult to remember that you need to start cool-season crops while the summer is still in full swing, but this year I'm on top it. I could wait a little longer and sow my seeds directly into the garden, but instead I start them in pots and set them out later. This is easier because I need to water and care for only a tray or two of seedlings rather than several garden beds, which are prone to drying out.

    My choices for seeds to start now to be transplanted when it gets cooler include a number of members of the cabbage family:

    • Broccoli
    • Brussels sprouts
    • Cabbage
    • Cauliflower
    • Collard greens
    • Kale
    • Swiss chard

    I'll fill a few dozen small containers with a seed-starting mix of equal parts of coconut coir and perlite with a couple of handfuls of lava sand for each 5-gallon bucket of mix I make up.

    In these seed-starting containers — or it can be small cups if that's all you have around — I'll sow several seeds to ensure that I'll have at least one seedling that makes it. When they're about a week old, I'll pinch out all but the strongest seedling and grow it into a plant worthy of transplanting.

    Most of these seeds germinate better at temperatures below 90, so I keep the containers in a tray under the shade of a large tree. Evaporation cools the seed-starting mix as long as I keep it moist.

    I use only water on the seedlings until the seeds germinate. After that I use a mixture of seaweed extract and water until the second set of leaves appear on the plant. Once the seedlings unfurl their true leaves, as they're called, I use Hasta Gro liquid plant food until the day I set them out in the garden, sometime late next month.

    Direct Sowing
    There's still time to grow many of the summer crops. With more than 90 days left before our first average frost of the year, crops like squash and cucumbers can produce plenty to harvest through the fall. I'll not get around to everything, but I'll sow seeds for a few of these quick crops that do well when they're started now:

    • Beans
    • Carrots — as long as I can keep the soil consistently moist.
    • Sweet corn
    • Cucumbers
    • Okra
    • Squash
    • Zucchini

    Rooting Stem Cuttings
    Herbs that have grown outdoors can become worn out by the end of summer. To keep a steady supply, I need to start new plants. Sowing them from seed takes the longest, so I'll root as many as I can from stem cuttings from established plants.

    Many herbs do well when started as stem cuttings, but I concentrate on basil and oregano because I use them often in pizza and pasta dishes. I'll take stem cuttings from some of my spent plants in the garden and root them in a mason jar with a weak solution of seaweed extract in water.

    Once they form roots, I can then grow them in a pot all winter in my greenhouse, or in a bright, sunny window.

    This rejuvenates my supply of herbs and gives me potted alternatives I can protect from the average first frost — which will likely kill everything growing outside sometime in November.

    Stem cuttings of holy basil root in a solution of water and seaweed extract.

    Picture of basil stem cuttings rooting in water
    Photo by Marshall Hinsley
    Stem cuttings of holy basil root in a solution of water and seaweed extract.
    unspecified
    news/innovation

    2026 jobs forecast

    Houston's health care sector will drive job growth in 2026, report predicts

    John Egan, InnovationMap
    Dec 24, 2025 | 9:30 am
    Texas Medical Center aerial view
    Photo by simonkr/Getty Images
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    Buoyed by the growing health care sector, the Houston metro area will add 30,900 jobs in 2026, according to a new forecast from the Greater Houston Partnership.

    The report predicts the Houston area’s health care sector will tack on 14,000 jobs next year, which would make it the No. 1 industry for local job growth. The 14,000 health care jobs would represent 45 percent of the projected 30,900 new jobs. In the job-creation column, the health care industry is followed by:

    • Construction: addition of 6,100 jobs in 2026
    • Public education: Addition of 5,800 jobs
    • Public administration: Addition of 5,000 jobs

    At the opposite end of the regional workforce, the administrative support services sector is expected to lose 7,500 jobs in 2026, preceded by:

    • Manufacturing: Loss of 3,400 jobs
    • Oil-and-gas extraction: Loss of 3,200 jobs
    • Retail: Loss of 1,800 jobs

    “While current employment growth has moderated, the outlook remains robust and Houston’s broader economic foundation remains strong,” GHP president and CEO Steve Kean said in the report.

    “Global companies are choosing to invest in Houston — Eli Lilly, Foxconn, Inventec, and others — because they believe in our workforce and our long-term trajectory,” Kean added. “These commitments reinforce that Houston is a place where companies can scale and where our economy continues to demonstrate its resilience as a major engine for growth and opportunity. These commitments and current prospects we are working on give us confidence in the future growth of our economy.”

    The Greater Houston Partnership says that while the 30,900-job forecast falls short of the region’s recent average of roughly 50,000 new jobs per year, it’s “broadly in line with the muted national outlook” for employment gains anticipated in 2026.

    “Even so, Houston’s young, skilled workforce and strong pipeline of major new projects should help offset energy sector pressures and keep regional growth on pace with the nation,” the report adds.

    The report says that even though the health care sector faces rising insurance costs, which might cause some people to delay or skip medical appointments, and federal changes in Medicare and Medicaid, strong demographic trends in the region will ensure health care remains “a key pillar of Houston’s economy.”

    As for the local oil-and-gas extraction industry, the report says fluctuations and uncertainty in the global oil-and-gas market will weigh on the Houston sector in 2026. Furthermore, oil-and-gas layoffs partly “reflect a longer-term trend as companies in the sector move toward greater efficiency using fewer workers to produce similar volumes,” according to the report.

    ----

    This story originally was published on our sister site, InnovationMap.

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