24,795 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening

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gridgardener

According to the production chart in book "how to grow more vegetables" by Jeavson you will need between 2-6 plants to produce 1 lb/0.45 kg of okra.

how many pods per lbs is some you have look up .

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illiveggies

We love Clemson Spineless - out here in IL, we plant straight from seed, after last frost. The spacing seems right, we plant ~20 plants in two rows of 10. Last year we were trying to harvest weekly at our community garden plot, and we were having to toss quite a few as they were too small one weekend and overdone the next. Harvesting about once every 2-3 days would probably be best as donnabaskets suggests.

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zzackey(8b GA)

Yes! Thank you! Mine is close enough. It was a total PIA to get that far.

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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

Bump.

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elisa_z5

jonhughes -- really nice to see you back here with your mind boggling numbers :)

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arileyz5

We put in an elevated raised bed for a salad garden last summer -- it's 2x8 and 30" tall, with a false floor 10" down from the top (cedar slats & landscape fabric on steel brackets). (The two boxes at the ends are 2x2 and 15" tall, no false bottom.) It looks good and it's easy for people with bad knees (i.e., me!).

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njitgrad(6A/6B)

I guess the only thing that I can realistically do is nothing. I already grow them on trellises and I've tried rotating them amongst my raised beds. Last year I even try grown some from seed mid-season in a fabric container with 5-1-1 mix. It started out great then went the same route as the cukes I had started earlier in the season.

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farmerdill

Realistically you can plant an ALS resistant variety. Not foolproof , but usually gives you sufficient edge to harvest cukes. For slicers varieties include Speedway, Dasher II,Thunder, Talledega etc. Ther are sevral pickler varieties Arabian, Calypso, Carolina etc. Don't kow of any burpless types with ALS resistance but they are probably out there. Belay that, Sweet Slice has ALS resistance.

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nancyjane_gardener(Zone 8ish North of San Francisco in the "real" wine country)

This sucks!

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wayne_5 zone 6a Central Indiana

nancyjane, I got an e-mail recently. I did not click the button [if it had one] to confirm my GW account. Maybe I thought it could be spam like I have gotten...just wanting you to click their link. I finally made it here, but am still trying to figure out where everybody and everything is.

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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

There is always winter sowing. That's about all I've been able to do this winter.

Rodney

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wildturkey_grower

Well maybe i'll have to support these too. Dang it! I'm in zone 9 so we're planting cool season crops now.

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gridgardener

there is no difference in taste if your growing for pods or pea part when compared other varieties of same type varieties.

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jeanwedding(6 ky)

I did some of the above. I also used those rattan looking paper plate holders, flea market :baskets" anything that is "meshY" so air can move.......that raised them look around prob have lots of free stuff already....

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weirdtrev

There are lots of cheap/free things you can put under the melons however there are cradles designed just for the occasion, I bought a couple sets just because I thought they looked nice. Gardener's Melon and Squash Cradle

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gridgardener

there maybe people who grow it in USA.

Importing seed potato to USA would a lot trouble due to import regulation of plant material.

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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

Not sure if this is a house roof or apartment building or something else since I assume it has a flat top. If it is a house roof, the first thing I'd do, if it hasn't been done already, is have someone come out to make sure the roof is structurally sound and can handle the added weight of the pots and plants. Chances are it can but it's one of those things I'd be paranoid about.

Rodney

This post was edited by theforgottenone1013 on Sun, Feb 8, 15 at 14:30

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beesneeds(zone 6)

Something else she could try is to rig up some shade- as in floating row cover kind of shade like they do with tobacco plants. It's not enough to cut off needed sun, but could be enough to take some of the scorch off the plants.

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iam3killerbs(7 NC Sandhills)

@bellatrix,

Where did you get the seed for the vining zucchini that resist SVB? I'd absolutely love to grow that sort.

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msmandytx(9)

I too am interested in buying some seed of this Gialla nostrale. Please if anyone knows where I can buy some seed.

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jnjfarm_gw(5a)

when I use peat pots, I soak them for a few hours and then rip off the bottom when transplanting. I have found the sides still intact when I clean the garden in fall.

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jeanwedding(6 ky)

Yall making me drool LOL Yum Yum delicious melons
First before I forget....
Oh met a nice Menonite guy at store..... He said he used "Dipel" he ran A LARGE garden and produce area.
Hubby was "meloned out"as well as "greenbeaned" out. not ME NOt me.... I love my own ORGANIC fab tasting melons. God blessed me last year with all my produce.....
I am so greatful.... I kept telling Hubby Wish I could put this some of these melons in suspended animation... LOL
But the DANG squash bugs drove me batty. constantly picking them off. I had fence aound whole garden. I think the 6 owls etc I moved around over the Tposts kept the blank blank birds away....
plus maybe Kitty too.....but the fence did not keep Kitty out..... he climbed the cattle panel fence covered with poultry wire etc on the sides.. Hubby installed 4 gates too.
all used Gates.... nor did the fence keep out a creepy skunk....but it did the rabbits.......
I even tried a vacuum cleaner on bugs. no go...
Got the wire to make "domes" etc but it takes so uch work yeah bags can cover and I did some of my melons. but protecting the vines from ..BUGSSSSSS is another thing.......
ah well
Happy gardening

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HunterDaddy

I'm new to this. What does the poly do?

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jeanwedding(6 ky)

we made 5 domes, stapled or screwed and washered wire into a frame. I use smaller opening wire on some of them. covered with plastic.
Have them for over a year now.
I wish now I could have attached tulle first cause so many problems with those DANG slugs, betles stink bugs etc.. absolutely despise white moths........
Wish I had covers on all 20 plus raised beds...
Even tried "hoops made of water tubing.. pain to take off and on covers...
Oh these is a setup a guy did in "Farm Show Magazine" I believe his cover slid off and on......

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tcgardener

Doodlebug
This was my first attempt at sweet potatoes also, and a bust. I grew slips from organic store bought sweet potatoes. I harvested a bunch of them about the size of the petite gourmet potatoes at the grocer. I planted some the raised beds now so we'll see if they fair better. Check out Debra Graf's website, she can grow some nice sweet potatoes.
Craig

Here is a link that might be useful: Mini Garden Abundence sweet potatoes

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little_minnie(zone 4a)

Did you wait until frost to dig them? That could be why the ones you did get rotted. Were there a lot of weeds? I grow mine in black plastic. Did they get enough water? Root veggies need the most. Did you do a soil test? Your ph may be off; they don't require fertile soil.

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