All My Cravings
Recipe Index
Shop
About Us
Free eBook
Comfort Food
Breakfasts
Breads
Appetizers
off the recipe
slow cooker
Desserts
Home » We Built a Greenhouse

We Built a Greenhouse

Author:

Joanna Cismaru

Last Updated: 5/29/26
28 Comments

This site runs ads and generates income from affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.


A 10 by 20 foot polycarbonate greenhouse with open door beside a dark grey steel building on an Alberta acreage under a dramatic cloudy sky.
A man in a blue shirt and yellow gardening gloves watering greenhouse raised beds with a hose inside a polycarbonate greenhouse with prairie fields visible in the background.

When we bought our acreage three and a half years ago, the greenhouse was already in the plans. Not as an afterthought. Not as a someday maybe. As an actual line item in the vision Remo had for this property from day one. We were standing in an empty field looking at a lot of potential and he was already talking about where the greenhouse would go.

A 10 by 20 foot polycarbonate greenhouse with open door beside a dark grey steel building on an Alberta acreage under a dramatic cloudy sky.

Then came two and a half years of building our custom home. Then the RV garage. Then my separate building where I cook and shoot and run the blog side of things. And through all of it, the greenhouse waited. Remo waited. He did not complain about it, which if you know Remo tells you everything you need to know about how much this mattered to him.

We broke ground this spring and finished at the beginning of May. Three and a half years after the idea. Worth it.

A Little About the Acreage

Front view of a polycarbonate greenhouse with both doors open wide revealing the interior raised beds and Alberta prairie fields stretching to the horizon beyond.

We moved from Langdon, which is a small hamlet about half an hour from Calgary. Roughly 5000 people, quiet, fine. We thought we were leaving the city behind. Turns out we are actually closer to Calgary now than we were then, about 15 minutes closer, which is objectively funny given that it feels like we are in the middle of nowhere. Open fields in every direction. Actual horizon. The kind of quiet that takes a few weeks to stop feeling strange.

The build took two and a half years and I will be honest with you, it was stressful. Not because anyone was rushing us. This is our forever home and we knew exactly what we wanted. But forever home means every decision matters and there were a lot of decisions. Remo and I are generally two peas in a pod, we agree on most things, but when we didn’t, our builder saved us. She’s a woman and she was always on my side. Remo had no chance and he knew it. Happy wife happy life, he says. Smart man.

Pink and red tulips growing along the side of a dark grey steel building on an Alberta acreage in spring.
Last fall Remo bought a bag of tulip bulbs on a whim and we planted them not really expecting much. Apparently they did not get that memo. This whole stretch will eventually be a proper planting bed. We are getting there.

Moving in day was everything I imagined except for the dust. There was still sanding happening in the basement and I am severely allergic to dust, so the first few days were not exactly the soft landing I had pictured. But once that cleared, I stood in this house we had spent two and a half years building and thought, yes. This is exactly right.

We built a road that loops around the entire property and I walk it with the dogs several times a day. Ten thousand steps without touching my treadmill, at least in summer. The dogs are absolutely living their best lives. I am also living my best life but the dogs are louder about it.

The greenhouse feels like the final piece. Like the property has been slowly becoming what it was always supposed to be, and this was the last thing on the list.

The Greenhouse Tour

Front view of a polycarbonate greenhouse with both doors open wide revealing the interior raised beds and Alberta prairie fields stretching to the horizon beyond.

It is 10 by 20 feet, which sounds manageable until you are standing inside it. Then it feels like its own little climate. Its own little world. We keep the doors open during the day so it does not actually smell like a greenhouse in the hot humid tropical sense. It smells like fresh air and basil and earth and something green that I don’t have a better word for. It smells like things are growing, which I suppose is the point.

The structure is proper. Not a kit from the garden centre that folds in a strong wind. A real polycarbonate greenhouse on a wood frame base that can handle a Canadian season, and if you are not from here, a Canadian season means it needs to handle things that would make a greenhouse in a gentler climate very nervous.

Overhead view of a greenhouse raised bed with young kale and lettuce plants in rich dark soil.

Inside right now we have raised beds running the length of both sides with a gravel path down the middle. One side is the herb bed. Basil, dill, parsley, oregano, rosemary, thyme, and I believe more are coming. I have been told more are coming. The other side has the tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, kale, and lettuce. There are also some plants in pots along the centre path that have not found their permanent home yet.

One thing that surprised me once everything was in the ground: tomatoes need a shocking amount of space. They are not polite about it. Remo researched this extensively and apparently if you crowd them it does not end well. The spacing between plants is more than you would expect. They are the high maintenance guests of the greenhouse and everyone else has to work around their schedule.

Close up of a small green pepper forming on a young pepper plant in a greenhouse raised bed.

The one adjustment we have had to make is watering. No irrigation yet, which means someone has to go in there every day with a hose. That someone is Remo. I want to be very clear that this is his project and his job and I am simply here to document it and eventually eat the tomatoes.

Remo and the Tomatoes

A man in a blue shirt and yellow gardening gloves watering greenhouse raised beds with a hose inside a polycarbonate greenhouse with prairie fields visible in the background.

I want to talk about this specifically because it genuinely delights me every single day.

Remo does not cook. This is a generous simplification. He makes a mean salad and his breakfasts are genuinely good, which means he is not without skills. But the chicken jerky years happened and we all remember them, so the greenhouse is a better outlet for his energy.

But give the man a greenhouse and apparently he becomes someone else entirely.

He has been watching YouTube videos about growing tomatoes with the focus of a person preparing for a very important exam. He knows about soil composition, watering schedules, pruning technique, which varieties do well in which conditions, and what the difference is between determinate and indeterminate tomatoes. I also now know what the difference is between determinate and indeterminate tomatoes because he told me and I was paying attention.

Close up of a cherry tomato plant with small green tomatoes already forming on the vine inside a greenhouse.

The varieties he chose: cherry tomatoes, a beefsteak type, heirloom, and a few others I cannot name with confidence but he absolutely can. Every time Remo takes on a project he goes completely all in. Full research mode. YouTube rabbit holes. Opinions. He has opinions about tomato varieties that I did not know a person could have until I started living with one.

The pruning is a whole thing. You have to remove certain shoots so the plant grows straight and strong rather than wild and unruly. Remo learned this from YouTube and takes it very seriously. I find this so funny and so wonderful that I have no further commentary to add. It speaks for itself.

Everyone deserves a thing that is entirely theirs. The greenhouse is Remo’s thing and watching him have it is one of my favourite parts of living out here.

I did suggest he consider naming the tomato plants. He has not done this yet. I am working on it.

What Comes Next

Long greenhouse raised bed filled with basil, parsley, tarragon and other herbs with Alberta prairie visible through the panels.

We are just getting started. The plants are in, everything is growing, and summer is still ahead of us.

If the tomatoes deliver on Remo’s research I will report back with recipes. The herbs I already know what to do with, I cook for a living, I have some thoughts. But the one I am most excited about is the eggplant. If it cooperates I am making Salată de Vinete, which coincidentally you eat with tomatoes. It’s a traditional Romanian roasted eggplant dip that I grew up eating and that I have had on JoCooks for years. Homegrown eggplant from our own greenhouse going into a recipe from my childhood is the kind of thing that makes a very good summer.

I will write about this as the season goes. There will be more to report, more things Remo has learned from YouTube, and almost certainly something that does not go as planned. That is where the best stories come from anyway.

👉 Watch the greenhouse tour on Facebook.

What to Read Next

  • The Menopause Nobody Talks About
  • Thursdays at My House
  • Why Willpower Was Never Enough
  • I Didn’t Know There Was Noise
Joanna Cismaru Avatar
Joanna Cismaru
I’m Joanna Cismaru, the cook, writer, and professional taste tester behind AllMyCravings. I traded software code for cinnamon rolls years ago and never looked back. These days, I’m sharing the recipes I actually make in my own kitchen. The cozy, crave worthy, everyday kind that doesn’t need a culinary degree or twelve trips to a specialty store. If it’s easy, flavorful, and makes you want seconds, you’ll find it here.
Learn More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




28 responses

  1. Juneil
    May 29, 2026

    What brand did you purchase? Where were the pieces/parts made? We bought one in 2006 and needs to be replaced. The pieces/parts came from someplace in Oregon but I can’t remember the company’s name.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 30, 2026

      We bought it from https://plantagreenhouses.ca/

      Reply
  2. Jannet
    May 29, 2026

    The green house looks great Jo, thank you kindly for sharing your recipes.
    Enjoy your Green house xx

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 30, 2026

      Thank you so much, so happy to have you here! 😊

      Reply
  3. Donna Roche
    May 29, 2026

    I am so happy for you. The greenhouse is beautiful!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      Thank you so much!

      Reply
  4. Peggy
    May 29, 2026

    I so enjoyed sharing your dream come true. What a great experience to watch everything growing and knowing that you and Remo made it happen! Congratulations

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      Thank you so much, there is something so satisfying about watching things grow knowing you built the space that made it possible! We cannot wait to share the harvest! 😊

      Reply
  5. Sonja
    May 29, 2026

    Congratulations Guys!
    You could hear the enthusiasm in your voice when you were giving the tour of the greenhouse. Remo must be in his element and full of joy! I hope everything grows to your satisfaction…your dream come true!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      Thank you so much, we really are beyond excited about it! Remo is absolutely in his element and yes, this has been a long time dream so seeing it come together has been just the best feeling! 😊

      Reply
  6. Susan Dobbs
    May 29, 2026

    Love this! I used to have a greenhouse and miss it very much. Question – does Remo have an exhaust fan planned? Greenhouses can get surprisingly hot, which is great fun on a sunny day with snow on the ground. Goes best with a Hawaiian shirt, of course. 😆

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      Ha, the Hawaiian shirt in a steamy greenhouse surrounded by snow is absolutely the vision and I am here for it! Great point on the exhaust fan, we will definitely be looking into ventilation before things heat up in there! 😊

      Reply
  7. Kim
    May 29, 2026

    Congratulations!!!!!
    I’m so envious! I’ve always wanted a Greenhouse! Yours looks great and spacious – here’s to years of nice healthy veggies and fruits. Keep us posted on your growing journey.
    P.S. The Tulips are great also!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      Thank you so much, we are so excited to see what we can grow in it! And yes the tulips were a lovely little bonus, will absolutely keep you all posted on the growing journey! 😊

      Reply
  8. Etoile
    May 29, 2026

    There is something quietly timeless about this kind of work.

    A greenhouse like this feels less like a project and more like a return to patience, to seasons, to the simple agreement between soil and hands. It carries the memory of older ways of living, when things were not rushed, only tended.

    What you describe feels deeply rooted in that rhythm building something slowly, intentionally, with care, as a way of living rather than just creating. There is something almost ancestral in it, as if the act of building is also a way of remembering how to live close to the earth again.

    And I have to smile at the thought of Remo confidently “supervising” while you are probably the one quietly making sure everything actually aligns, measures, and holds together. A very familiar and beautiful kind of teamwork.

    I’m writing this from Québec, Canada, where we also know a thing or two about long winters, patient seasons, and the value of building things that last.

    What you’ve shared is not just glass and wood, but a small refuge where growth is allowed to happen in its own time. It feels like something that doesn’t belong to the rush of today, but to something steadier, older, more human.

    And somehow, it leaves a quiet warmth behind — the kind that lingers, like light on glass at the end of a long day.

    Truly beautiful work. A reminder that creating together, patiently, simply, faithfully is still one of the most meaningful things we can do.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      This is one of the most beautiful comments I have ever received and it genuinely stopped me in my tracks! Fellow Canadian winter survivor, you clearly understand exactly why a greenhouse feels less like a structure and more like a little act of hope! 😊

      Reply
  9. Daiana
    May 29, 2026

    I love it!!! The sense of pride you get from knowing you’ve grown your own food, is great! My Dad grew up farming and taught me what I know, and I’m forever grateful. I’m now growing a few things and it somehow just tastes better.
    It also feels great to share your bounty with family, friends, and neighbors.

    Great job on the greenhouse! I think you’re both going to love it!!!!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      Homegrown really does taste better, there is simply no arguing with that! So beautiful that your dad passed that knowledge down to you and now you are carrying it forward, thank you for the kind words! 😊

      Reply
  10. I have a weird name
    May 29, 2026

    That’s wonderful! I did not think I could grow any veggies, even though I had never tried. When my now-husband (we got married last year. Two old farts in love!) and I moved into this old house a few years ago, I gave it a try, and sure enough, I was growing tomatoes, green peppers, etc.

    Keep us updated! I’d love to see your haul of veggies when they’re ready to harvest.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 29, 2026

      First of all congratulations, two old farts in love is the most delightful way to describe a wedding! And look at you growing tomatoes and peppers like a pro, will absolutely keep you posted on the harvest! 😊

      Reply
1 2
Newer Comments→

Meet Jo

We’re Joanna and Remo, a wife and husband duo obsessed with good food, simple ingredients, and turning everyday cravings into recipes you’ll actually want to make.

Learn more

you’ll love these

Popular Posts

  • Over-the-Top Triple Cheese Mac and Cheese

    Over-the-Top Triple Cheese Mac and Cheese

  • Caramelized Onion & Gruyère Mashed Potatoes

    Caramelized Onion & Gruyère Mashed Potatoes

  • Oatmeal Jam Bars

    Oatmeal Jam Bars

  • Cajun Alfredo Lasagna

    Cajun Alfredo Lasagna

Never miss a recipe!

Get our FREE recipe eBook + newsletter!


Appetizers

Dips & Spreads
Finger Foods
Game-Day
Party Bites

Breakfasts

Muffins
Pancakes
Savory Breakfast
Sweet Breakfast

Desserts

Cakes
Chocolate Lovers
Cookies & Bars
Pies & Tarts

Meals

30-Minute
Cozy Weekend
Easy Weeknight
Family-Friendly

Seasonal

Fall Comfort
Spring Treats
Summer Cravings
Winter Warmers

Sides

Comfort Salads
Pasta Salads
Potato & Rice
Vegetable Sides
about us
Free eBook
Privacy Policy

All My Cravings