23,948 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening

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Ohiofem(6a Ohio)

Can you plant both in the same hill about 10-12 inches apart? Then, in a couple weeks, you could remove the smaller or weaker one by cutting it off at the base rather than pulling or digging it up. There are often problems with small cucurbits when you first plant out, like insects or root damage. If you have both in the ground to begin, you have a better chance of ending up with a healthy one.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 1:52PM
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Raptor666

I guess you can't tell from the pics but there's actually 6 individuals in each pot, so I was planning on planting one pot, and snipping off the weakest 3 from that group after a week or two. I don't have the space for 2nd pot atm, so back it goes!

All this talk of this and that pot... starting to get the munchies. ;p

Edit: On closer inspection, it might be 3 plants with 2 stalks each forming a V shape that meet below the dirt. Is that normal for cantaloupes? Not familiar with out they grow. These are Super Hybrid 45, btw.

While I'm on it, can I use a black construction (garbage) bag cut open and with weep holes punched to cover the mound? I've read to cover the mounds with tarp or clear plastic but I don't have anything like that but the black construction bag.

This post was edited by Raptor666 on Sat, Jun 21, 14 at 16:01

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 3:03PM
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sleevendog (5a NY)

I don't mind the pic confusion...takes a bit to figure it out. And who has the time when the garden needs tending, ; )
Some salad mixes the past few years have a mixed blend of salads and greens. Meant to be planted tight and cut young, then come up for another round or three...
To be eaten fresh, not cooked...but if grown thin, will obviously become a larger plant to be cooked...a few holes do not matter. They look healthy but don't really like the heat. Could get a bit tough and woody if not picked. Stops growing. A bit of shade helps.
And mulch...
A row cover keeps the bugs out. In the heat of July a bolt of tulle is handy to have for a cover...
I don't have BT but not a bad thing to have but i've not had the need yet...

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 9:01PM
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carla_12

sorry, what's "a bolt of tulle"? It's kind strange that this is the first year (over about 4 years) I have had a "bug" problem in my veggie garden...I never have before and have never had to used pesticides! I think the reason there is lettuce in with the collards is because I planted lettuce in fall but nothing came up so I planted the collards later, when the seed packet said to plant. I guess some lettuce decided to grow after all. Since I love most greens, I guess "mixed blends of salads and greens" will work out great for me! Besides, I don't mind...I'm pretty laid back with my garden - I do very little thinning out of seedlings, transplanting, etc., I let some weeds/grasses grow to keep some veggies off the soil. My main source of fertilizer is rabbit manure and some chicken manure. I usually end up with way more veggies than my husband and I can use. I love giving away my produce to friends, family, leaving some at church and the office, etc. I just love gardening - especially the experimenting part. Every year I try to add several new vegetables to my garden selections, even if I don't like to eat them - there's always someone out there that want them. When people look at my garden they are amazed that it produces as well as it does...I call it organized chaos...lol

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 2:04PM
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pellen

I've tried it for the first time this year. So far, so good. Also, the stems are EDIBLE!!! I cut off the leaf at rubbed a paper towel over the stem until all the stickers came off (for some pesky stickers, I used my thumbnail from behind the safety of the paper towel. They steam like asparagus or can be snipped in to pieces like green beans. They taste like a combination of green beans and the squash. They are DELICIOUS cooked up in eggs. They don't store long, though, maybe a couple of days in the fridge before the shrivel and loose all their moisture, But then you can use them like a dried vegetable as they weren't moldy, just shriveled.

The leaves are edible too, but I haven't figured out a way to remove the stickers from them. They just tear underneath the paper towel. Some sites say you can peal them, but really, how do you peel a leaf??? Also, if you boil them in soups the stickers aren't supposed to be an issue, but its too hot out here for soups, so my leaves have been finding their way to the compost heap or the trash if they're spotty.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 12:42PM
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pellen

Oh, and yes, I've been cutting at the base of the stem where it comes out of the main stalk of the plant. The stemps are hollow, so it's scary. You'd think anything could crawl in there and infect your babies, but the bottom stems tend to turn yellow and brown and rot off anyway, and the lower leaves are the first ones most likely to get diseases, so removing them has to be good for the plant too.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 12:46PM
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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

Occasionally cukes are deformed like that. However, in the photo, I see no leaves except for one. And that leaf is brown and shriveled up. That is not normal. On a healthy cucumber plant there should be a lot, and I do mean a lot, more leaves than I see. You didn't spray with vinegar again, did you?

Rodney

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 10:24AM
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lilyd74 (5b sw MI)

That cuke also looks like it may have sat too long on the vine without being picked. Did it look better a week ago?

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 12:21PM
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seysonn(8a WA/HZ 1)

I don't think the soil(neither in the pots, nor in the bed) was to blame. The plants were happy in the pot. Secondly the plants root never managed to get out of the pot.

About Cucurbits:
They are very cold sensitive. I don't know what your climate is like but they did not die of cold, although it could have contributed.

At this stage, you should either start anew from seeds or get new plants. EVEN IF you are successful in reviving them, they are so badly stressed that any plant started from seed today will come and surpass those. Just within last week I lost some of my cucumbers to cold. There is no or little hope when cucurbits are stressed. I am going to re-seed again.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 11:38PM
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catherinet(5 IN)

Maybe something funky in the steer manure? Maybe you could have your soil tested at your local ag extension office?

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 7:17AM
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catherinet(5 IN)

Some type of leaf miner?

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 5:37PM
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mav72(10b)

That's what I thought too but I heard it was some sort of mineral deficiency... I don't know if it's true or not... The leaf minors that I'm familiar with leave trails.

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 3:58AM
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jctsai8b(8B)

I bought white skin purple fleshed sweet potatoes from the flea market and tried to grow but failed 2 years in a row.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 9:50PM
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mav72(10b)

My bro has a small patch growing in his yard, planted by his late mother in law.. It comes back every year. So I think you're ok leaving them in...

    Bookmark     June 21, 2014 at 12:06AM
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seysonn(8a WA/HZ 1)

Just about a week ago, I was visiting a friend. I saw a pot that wad dug just like that. Lo and behold, few minutes later a chipmonk came started doing it in front of our eyes. We covered the pots with chicken wire.

Those hole are two big for birds and too small for things like skunk , raccoon.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2014 at 5:58PM
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djkj(9b)

Yes darn those chipmunks!! There's one I think that eats my strawberries every morning. He is always near my strawberry plants. Some of them look obese due to the amount of things they eat from our garden :-]

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 11:30PM
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ltilton

I grew tromboncino squash last year and routinely picked the babies just before the flowers opened. Couldn't tell the difference in the taste.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 2:20PM
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daninthedirt(Cent TX; HZ10, Sunset z30, USDA z8a)

My understanding is that all squash can exhibit parenthocarpia. Some squash are much more likely to do so (and are often thereby simply called a parenthocarpic variety), and some are less likely to do it. So I'm not sure you can say that one variety simply won't do it.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 10:49PM
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woohooman San Diego CA zone 10a

I think you answered your own question. Take the remaining plants over to your bf's or move the plants to a sunnier, drier location. if rain is still in the forecast, try to shield them. They simply need drying out. Pepper plants hate wet feet. They're very resilient though, so hang in there.

Best way to water peppers is drench thoroughly, let dry out almost to the point of bone dry, water thoroughly, and so on.

Kevin

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 5:56PM
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japiet

Hi,

It looks like you have Southern Blight. It is a fungal pathogen and is very common in places that have high humidity and a lot of rain.

You can spray the plants with Neem oil, it's organic, or with a fungicide.

Good luck

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 7:19PM
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Slimy_Okra(2b)

Not poisonous, although I've never heard of people eating zucchini leaves. In Africa, pumpkin leaves are eaten and they are a close relative.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 6:35PM
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sleevendog (5a NY)

The young leaves with some stem can be quite good. Before they get fuzzy, prickly.
A better edible leaf is on the serpent or also called Cucuzzi. It is actually an edible gourd and has a smooth leaf. I prefer it so don't bother with the regular zuc leaves.

Last year the first frost was so late i had a whole second crop and did cut all the fresh growth for a meal but that is rare...

I also grow a variety that produces an unusual abundance of flower for stuffing...
A local nursery sells this seed provider so i grow a bit of these...
(good pole beans as well)

Here is a link that might be useful: Franchi

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 7:16PM
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carla_12

sorry, I'm new to posting and didn't know if I could put more than one photo per post. I will get the Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis - and repost a photo of my garden in a couple of weeks...hopefully all photos in one post and all plants bug free. It's a large garden and the bugs seem to only bother some plants and not others - for example the squash, cucumbers, corn, sunflowers aren't bothered at all!? I have tried hand picking the bugs but can't keep up with the bugs...

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 6:01PM
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woohooman San Diego CA zone 10a

I don't know what else you're growing, but BT should be good for the brassicas and anything in the nightshade family for fornworms(peppers,eggplant,maters, etc)

Here's a tutorial for posting multiple pics.

Kevin

Here is a link that might be useful: tutorial

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 6:09PM
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loribee2(CA 9)

No, won't hurt birds or fowl. Though, I wouldn't spray it right on the guy, LOL

I think Lowes is where I got mine. Safer is the most common brand, but just look at the ingredients of anything labeled caterpillar killer. If it's Bt and also has that "OMRI" organic certified label on the front, you should be good.

And if you can spend the 15 bucks, help yourself out and get a 1-gallon sprayer!

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 6:02PM
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woohooman San Diego CA zone 10a

I checked at Lowe's the other day and they didn't have it -- they used to! Home Depot and maybe even Walmart will have it

Make sure the BT is the "K "variant. The "I" varant is for mosquitos and fungus gnats.

Your rooster -- I'd find a couple of the caterpillars, pick up the rooster, and show them to him. he might clear up your problem in no time. And no, BT only harms caterpillars.

Kevin

This post was edited by woohooman on Fri, Jun 20, 14 at 18:26

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 6:02PM
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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

This is essentially a duplicate post that was already answered.

Rodney

Here is a link that might be useful: Help ID these veggie plants

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 5:31PM
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wayne_5 zone 6a Central Indiana

I've done it both ways...more work to put it down and take it up, but there are fewer weeds. It isn't necessary here for heat.

I don't get any real production from the vines where they have rooted. I planted them a little closer this year. maybe that will lessen the tendency to lunkers.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 11:40AM
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mav72(10b)

I tried it this year but I have a hard time figureing out the watering schedule. The plants without it look much better...

    Bookmark     June 20, 2014 at 5:11PM
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