Starting A Vegetable Garden
Grow what you like to eat and try vegetables that are harder to find in the supermarket (like hot peppers or heirloom tomatoes). If space is limited, plant in containers.
Seed packets will advise you how deep to plant each crop; soil depth is key for success. Water newly planted seeds and transplants daily until established; water mature plants as needed.
Although there are many old sayings such as, “Plant your potatoes when the oak leaves are the size of a mouse’s ear,” I would rather depend on soil temperature and calendar dates. Besides, who really knows the size of a mouse’s ear?
Mid-May is good for cool-weather crops such as spinach, peas, lettuce, onions, potatoes and broccoli-family plants. I don’t put heat-loving plants — such as tomatoes, cucumbers, zucchini, corn and peppers — in the ground until it is at least 60 degrees. The date for this is usually around June 10 here in chilly Cornish Flat, New Hampshire, but may be sooner depending on where you are.
I know you are anxious to get your crops growing, but tomato seedlings put in chilly soil when nights are still cold are not happy. They don’t do much growing and may take time to recover. I’d rather keep them sitting on a sunny lawn all day and bring them in at night.
Gardening with Henry Homeyer:Enjoy early-season treats from the garden and the woods
How to harden off plants before putting them in the ground
Before you think about putting plants in the ground, please harden them off. That means introducing them to full sun over the period of a week. Start with morning-only sun, then add an hour of afternoon sun and work up to a full day of sun. Cloudy days allow you to keep them out all day, but watch out for rain. If they are in a flat that holds water, they can get too wet or get beaten flat.
“Stella Natura,” uses the position of the moon, stars and planets to determine what to plant — or, more importantly, when to plant nothing.
Ask at the nursery where you buy your plants if they have been hardened off. Things such as cabbage and lettuce probably are already hardened off and sitting outside the greenhouses on tables. If so, they are ready to plant anytime, but there’s no harm in asking.
Neptune’s Harvest.
Gardening with Henry Homeyer:Leave the lawn alone for ‘No Mow May’ in order to let wildflowers and weeds bloom
“The Vegetable Gardener’s Bible,” by Vermont author Ed Smith. Even I use it from time to time, and I’ve been growing vegetables for decades. Ed and his wife, Sylvia, really know their stuff, and they buy very few vegetables in a year.
Gardening with Henry Homeyer:The basic ground rules for testing and improving your soil
To maximize garden space, I plant quick-growing plants such as radishes and lettuce in between or around slower-growing things such as tomatoes. Plant a tomato, put it in its 54-inch support cage (never use small cages), then circle it with lettuce starts. The lettuce will be ready to eat before the tomato is big enough to shade them. I just planted my onions, and planted lettuce in the spaces between rows of onions. Don’t plant things in your asparagus patch, despite all that space, as asparagus hates company.
cover them with ReMay or row cover, a light synthetic fabric made for gardens that holds in heat and keeps bugs off.
Gardening with Henry Homeyer:Dream big and try something new for your garden this season
Natural methods of pest control
Most years, I have a pest called the striped cucumber beetle. It dwells in the ground and comes out at night. If I were to plant cucumbers, pumpkins or squashes by seed in the ground, the beetles would arrive and eat the first two leaves off right away, killing the plant. So now I start them indoors by seed and let them develop four to six leaves before I plant them outside. Sometimes I cover them with ReMay, too.
Potatoes are plagued by the Colorado potato beetle almost anywhere. I minimize the problem by planting my potatoes later in the season than my neighbors. I look for these striped beetles, their larvae and orange egg masses. I hand-pick them and then drop them in soapy water. I do that early on, as they multiply quickly, and each beetle will lay many eggs.
Being a good gardener takes time, but don’t be discouraged. One day you will retire and have plenty of time — even if maybe not enough energy! Just remember to take time to enjoy what you do!
Henry Homeyer’s blog appears twice a week at gardening-guy.com. Write to him at P.O. Box 364, Cornish Flat, N.H. 03746. Please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope if you wish a mailed response. Or email henry.homeyer@comcast.net.
Source: providencejournal.com
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