23,594 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening

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djkj(9b)

Those holes look like the ones from worms/loopers. In the evening take a flashlight and try to find them. They will be most likely on the under side of the leaves.

    Bookmark   July 1, 2014 at 10:58AM
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planterjeff(7b Grant Park Atlanta)

I plant bush beans all year starting in march and I dont stop until it is too cold. I have contender, blue lake and burpees choice right now. I plant about 9 seeds every two weeks and they all seem to be fine.

    Bookmark   July 1, 2014 at 10:51AM
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Goldami1

?somebody?

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 8:53AM
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mav72(10b)

Don't know.. They might be springtails... A slow gradual dry down of your soil may help..

    Bookmark   July 1, 2014 at 1:16AM
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rina_

Dave, thank you for the answer.
Rina

    Bookmark   June 29, 2014 at 11:19PM
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sweetwilliam89(5b)

Thanks a lot everyone for all of the advice. After reading the posts I was kind of thinking the same thing that spring has few things that can beat out fall Glib. But I guess one thing spring does have over fall it comes right after winter and a lot of folk are bursting to get something planted. It seems sad that summer comes just before fall as a lot of people are getting tired and are busy getting another school year started and miss out on the fall treats.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 10:57PM
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ltilton

I was just called away at the beginning of June for a family emergency. By the time I got back two weeks later, the weeds had attacked and conquered everywhere. The asparagus bed is full of violets.

Fortunately, when the stalks die back in November, it's possible to do some serious weed work in the bed.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:55AM
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nancyjane_gardener(Zone 8ish North of San Francisco in the "real" wine country)

Yes, Dave . The Hawaii weed gods got me good! LOL
I wish could bring back some of their non-weeds! Nancy

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 10:00PM
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pnbrown

In sandy soil especially, frequent light waterings produce shallow-rooted plants with no ability to withstand drought. In heavy soils it might create root rot and other saturation-related problems.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 7:07PM
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seysonn(8a WA/HZ 1)

It is a matter of necessity and convenience.
When plants can find water and nutrients right in front of their nose , why bother to dig in ? That's smart !. In nature everything pick the path of least resistance ( = easy route) .

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 7:24PM
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Matthew Condon - Indiana.Matt - IN, Zone 5/6(Indiana Zone 5/6)

It looks as if a furrow has been chewed across the skin of the tomato. It could be some kind of caterpillar. I had some caterpillars eat the skin around where the tomato is attached to the stem. Either spray insecticide (organic is a good choice) or just conduct a daly inspection and pull them off. Look closely...they know how to hide.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:49AM
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Kay17jan

Thanks a lot for your responses.
All the branches below this tomato, and 2 more tomatoes are missing, everything has completely vanished. I looked around in the yard to find any traces but din't find anything. I don't think it's caterpillars, I have never seen any of them in my garden yet.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 7:02PM
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hnycrk(8a)

Inch a week. I flood the rows about once the week.

    Bookmark   June 29, 2014 at 9:37PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

When you stop to realize that hundreds of thousands of acres of corn are grown annually using only rainfall and ground water to hydrate them then you get an accurate idea of the water needs of corn. An inch to 1 1/2" of water a week is adequate unless growing in an exceptionally hot and dry climate.

So once again - where do you live and garden?

Dave

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 5:58PM
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melikeeatplants

Yes, everything is looking good.... you'll be enjoying the fruits of your labor soon ;)

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 3:19PM
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nvrnugh(7b-8a Chesapeake, VA)

emmers - Thanks for the info as I didn't know. I've been on here for years but mostly as a searcher/lurker.

eheheh the animals are to scare away the bad and keep em company. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. Funny most miss them but once they see one they can't stop trying to find them all.

In order of the pics left to right I have:
Peppers:
The Big Early
Purple Beauty Sweet
Golden California Wonder Sweet
Red Chili Hot
Tomatoes:
Sugary
Patio
La Roma
Golden Jubilee
Squash:
Yellow Straight Neck
Hybrid Cucumber
Zucchini
and last Black Beauty Egg Plant

WOW! I never knew about SVB and I haven't seen any signs and now I will keep a look out. Thanks so much for the advise.

I just pick one Yellow and Zucchini yesterday but that's it so far.

loribee2 - Thank you and I certainly don't mind trail and error :) that's life after all.

melikeeatplants - Thanks! I can't wait!!

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 4:44PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Not alot you can do except flush/dilute with lots of water or add fresh materials (topsoil, compost, etc.) to dilute and bind up the excess nitrogen. Then replant. It's either that of let it sit dormant and compost in place for several months and then replant if season length allows.

Dave

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 2:18PM
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loribee2(CA 9)

Why do you think they died from too much manure?

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 2:45PM
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ltilton

This is pretty common. Let them grow to nourish the crowns for next year's crop.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:57AM
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sweetquietplace(6 WNC Mtn.)

I get new shoots after heavy rains.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 10:55AM
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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

Cut it and use it as neccesary. Don't pull it up as it will continue to grow into fall.

Rodney

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:52AM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Depends on what you planted it for, how you plan/planned to use it. Only for fresh eating, for canning or freezing or dehydrating?

If you like it but only want to eat it fresh then you might as well pull it and replant in the fall. That gives you the best fresh flavor without the bitterness.

If you planted as a green manure for soil benefits then turn it into the soil or toss it in the compost bin.

Dave

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:53AM
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loribee2(CA 9)

I wouldn't do seeds unless you have a way to bring the seedlings close to the light. They need to be no more than a couple inches from the bulbs. Given that, I'm not sure what value you're getting by putting them in a glass container. They need air circulation, which they wouldn't get in there, and it may end up too hot.

There is a forum called "Garden Junk". Some seriously creative people over there who might give you some ideas on what you can do with it (though you'll no doubt get one or two telling to you plant a fairy garden in it, LOL)

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:39AM
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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

Personally, I'd use it as a terrarium for houseplants (after repairing the crack(s) first) rather than a greenhouse for vegetables.

As loribee2 said, veggies need a high amount of light. When people use flourescent lights they keep the bulbs only 1-2 inches away from the top of the plants. If the bulbs are any higher it leads to "leggy" plants. Good air circulation is a must to prevent damping off (fungus) problems. And it seems like watering the plants would be a bit of a pain. Plus, it just doesn't seem big enough to start many plants to me.

Rodney

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:48AM
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loribee2(CA 9)

I grow trellised/tall plants in the same beds with shorter ones. I just make sure the trellised ones are not planted on the south side of the bed.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:16AM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Forget the 3 sisters idea. It doesn't work for many reasons that are discussed in the many previous threads here about it.

But yes, IF you can plant so that the okra section of the bed doesn't shade the melon section - depends on how your bed lays in relationship to the sun position it could work.

You'd still have the different water and nutrient needs of the plants to contend with so separate them as much as possible.

Dave

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:46AM
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art_1(10 CA)

Yes after much deliberation I think you are right. I may be overthinking it.

I know T-posts (as well as remesh cages) last a long time but it's a relatively big initial cost.

    Bookmark   June 29, 2014 at 11:38PM
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loribee2(CA 9)

I got mine at Tractor Supply. Way, way cheaper than the ones at Lowes or Home Depot. But yes, they were about $6 each. I have a small garden so I didn't need too many.

    Bookmark   June 30, 2014 at 9:31AM
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