23,948 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening

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stuffradio

I would like to grow Garlic in the field eventually. I want to be growing 1,000+ plants.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 11:12PM
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wayne_5 zone 6a Central Indiana

I'm not very familiar about the planting time for garlic. If you have standing water in wintertime, I suggest that you make some raised strips with walk and drainage channels between the raised strips through the field. The raised strips could be augmented with some organic matter. The dirt for raised strips simply comes from the channels.

Daikon radishes [tillage type] is my favorite cover crop and it winter kills here, but probably not out where you are, so you might have to mow and till it in spring.

    Bookmark     July 21, 2013 at 10:58AM
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jean001a(Portland OR 7b)

Field crops (carrots and more) are cooled as soon as they are picked/harvested during the cool hours of the early morning..

Cutting off the tops will also help.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 7:46PM
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raistlyn

Not an expert but heres my expereience:

Some carrot varieties keep better than others. I grew nutri red carrots this year and last and find that they dont keep well. They go soft quickly (im talking just a couple of hours) and look a bit like yours in the photo. The orange ones kept much better. And yes, if you cut off the tops and store them in a cool place, they will keep much better.

    Bookmark     July 21, 2013 at 9:31AM
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knlim000(9a)

yet, another pic. cassava or caster beans?

    Bookmark     July 21, 2013 at 3:26AM
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rhizo_1 (North AL) zone 7

Looks much more like cassava, to me.

    Bookmark     July 21, 2013 at 8:44AM
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NilaJones(7b)

Thanks, folks!

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 6:20PM
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Creek-side(5)

I don't use fertilizer, but lately I have found that if you water bush beans every day they well will produce over many, many weeks.

    Bookmark     July 21, 2013 at 8:34AM
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julia42(9a)

I had three zucchini plants that did the same thing this spring. In the case of my plants, I'm pretty sure what happened was that we had some brief cold temperatures early in the season that nipped the growing tip, so the plant grew two stems below the damage. I would think this could happen because of mechanical damage, too, although mine was definitely weather related.

None of my double-stemmed plants produced well. I don't remember if I even got a single squash from any of them. If you still have time, I'd replant. If not, I guess you could try cutting one stem back - after my experience it seems like it would be no great loss.

But maybe others have had better luck?

    Bookmark     July 21, 2013 at 8:00AM
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seysonn(8a WA/HZ 1)

In CA, zone 9 ??? you can plant just about anything you want, Bro !!

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 8:30PM
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melikeeatplants

This is the recommendations for Santa Clara County, which is mostly Zone 9

Here is a link that might be useful: Planting Calendar

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 9:32PM
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newyorkrita(z6b/7a LI NY)

Those Burpless Cucumbers are a fabulous variety. My favorite cucumbers that I grow each year and have for years. But no pollination problems here as I always grow other varieties of cukes also.

If you want to try an all female variety of cucumbers that does not require any pollination to set, try Camilla. Developed for greenhouse growing but grow perfectly fine outside in the garden.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 8:07PM
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theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

The problem is that people didn't know they were getting an all-female variety. I'm looking in the official Burpee catalog they sent out this year and the description for Sweet Burpless Hybrid reads:

"55 days. Sweet, mild-tasting, 10" fruits on high-yeilding, disease-resistant plants."

Burpee is not describing this variety correctly. There are now 4 people in the past few days having issues with this variety of cucumber.

Rodney

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 8:49PM
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seysonn(8a WA/HZ 1)

Why not. It is not going to hurt anything and MIGHT work.
Just put them in blender(with some water) blend and filter(coffee filter ?) and spray. I would even use the pulp as well around the plants. They will smell MINTY too.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 12:35AM
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jean001a(Portland OR 7b)

Traps, secured to something heavy that can't be dragged away, work.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 7:55PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

They go by several names - June Bugs, June Beetles, Camphor Beetles, etc. Members of the scarab beetle family.

Dave

Here is a link that might be useful: June Bugs

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 6:27PM
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wayne_5 zone 6a Central Indiana

I started broccoli seeds on June 17th and July 3rd. I raise full season varieties because...they are better quality for the most part.

In my zone...similar to yours, it will push things to get a crop and some side heads if sown now unless you have an early variety.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 11:50AM
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springtogarden(6)

I chose the Italian early variety. It is supposed to be 48 days so we will see. Lately, our falls have been warmer than usual so I am rolling the dice and seeing what I get. Even if it is too late, I am learning things. Maybe this way I can nail down a time for my area. It is confusing and I didn't have a spot then. I am learning that some things are just trial and error.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 6:24PM
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vacantenigma

Since the potato plants completely died and shriveled up and disappeared I decided to dig in today and see if anything had survived. OMG I'm so excited. I got about 7 lbs, which isn't that much I guess, but considering it didn't seem to go so well, I'm happy.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 3:29PM
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springtogarden(6)

Thank you for the update! My potato plant has just gone yellow. So I am worried I won't have any potatoes. Your post gives me hope.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 5:49PM
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woohooman San Diego CA zone 10a

Unless you plan to grow ACRES of Chard, ONE plant will be more than enough. I'm letting one bolt right now myself. It's about 8 feet tall and has hundreds, if not thousands, of seeds. You may want to stake it.

Kevin

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 12:14PM
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nancyjane_gardener(Zone 8ish North of San Francisco in the "real" wine country)

I pulled up all but one before I read this. I only need a few for the 2 of us.
Nancy

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 5:15PM
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seysonn(8a WA/HZ 1)

can you post pictures ?

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 2:08PM
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raistlyn

Ive never had this problem but found this online. It does advise crop rotation. Or you could grow them in pots next year and use a fungicide spray to prevent it from coming back. Not sure if you want to still consume the veg though. I dont think i would.

http://www.sbreb.org/brochures/cercospora/leafspot.htm

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 3:46PM
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susanzone5(z5NY)

Crop rotation is necessary, not just for disease control, but for nutrient usage, too. Plant your chard in a different place and use a lot of compost in the fall, which will add nutrients. You could also plant a chard here and a chard there, between other plants.

I cut down a lot of trees so I could have a sunny garden, but I live in the woods with hundreds of acres of forest. Sometimes you have to weigh the pros and cons and go from there.

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 9:02AM
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lkzz(7b)

Oh gosh...I am with you. I just came in from garden maintenance and am rather discouraged myself. Had to pull all the cucumber plants - too much disease. Got a fair harvest but not great.

Killed a dozen horn worms on the tomato plants which are struggling with blight. Planted those from seed - first time - lots of effort there.

Squash plants just won't thrive this year - and then there's the SVB and squash bugs to contend with.

All the pepper plants (about 15) are toast because of the constant rain - a small amount of fruit but that's all. Small and sad looking plants.

So...a bit disheartening but what can you do when the weather is so rainy and cloudy? Last few days have been sunny but the humidity is brutal. 91% at 8 am this morning.

And to add insult to injury, I inhaled a bug whilst in the garden this morning...down the hatch it went...yuck. (That was to make you laugh).

Try not to let it get you down, it can always be worse (like Upstate South Carolina worse).

    Bookmark     July 20, 2013 at 2:41PM
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