23,594 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening

Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
farmerdill

Concur: That heavy flower stalk extends into the center. The onion will not keep at all as that stalk deteriorates. Outer rings, if they form and on short day onions they usually do, will be good for use if you cut them away from that central stalk.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 2:10PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
wantonamara Z8 CenTex

Thanks all. That is what I thought. They are already yanked. and is dinner tonight.I had one flower in the whole scad of onion sets so not bad. The onions are fairly small since I never give them the room they deserve because my garden is only 20' x 16' and between trees..

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 2:40PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
sunnibel7 Md 7(7)

I don't see any photos either. Bad tastes in lettuce usually come from too much heat or too much dry or too old. The outer leaves are the oldest and most highly flavored. Butter head is a heading lettuce and as such it is best used by harvesting the whole head. Pick off the outer leaves and try the inner ones. It may taste much much better. I don't always eat the outer leaves on my romaine for the same reason.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 10:55AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
AiliDeSpain(6a - Utah)

I heard that if you soak the lettuce in cold water for about an hour after harvesting it will not be as bitter, also the longer it's refrigerated the more it will lose it's bitter taste.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 12:17PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
farmerdill

Use them for green onions. Sets are long day onions that don't start bulbing until late June. They are notorious for bolting because they are last years growth. Yours is most likely Red Wetherfield. When you want bulb onions use plants appropriate to your area.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 11:12AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
AiliDeSpain(6a - Utah)

I had sets in the ground from last year that did the same thing. I pulled them and used as green onions. I do however have one still in the ground beginning to bulb. It does have a flower but it is not huge yet like the others got.
I planted sets this spring as well and so far so good no bolting. I hope they bulb up in July.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 12:15PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
BigN_187(9)

Interesting... So it looks like they are either Green Arrow shelling peas, or sugar snap pole peas...?

The dry pods were sort of difficult to open... I had to cut them, pretty much. However - I thought Green Arrow pods usually have peas more in the 8-11 range...? All of these pods had 5-6 peas, max.

And the fewest I counted in all the pods I got was 2.

This post was edited by BigN_187 on Tue, May 28, 13 at 1:51

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 1:35AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
farmerdill

Green Arrow was just an example of a wrinkle seeded pea That I had handy. All of them both shelling and snap will have a similar appearance. If they were difficult to open then I would lean toward a snap pea. They have fleshy pods which when dried don't open as easily as the tougher stringy pods of a shelling pea. There are over 300 named varieties of English pea and over 40 varieties of snap pea. However the number that will get 4 ft tall is pretty limited. You can probably make a decent guess after you grow them out.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 11:24AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Easiest it to use the fabric to edge the planting row (1 piece on one side, another on the other side of the planting space) rather than cover over it.

But otherwise you have to take scissors and cut out an inch to 1 1/2" (depending on the plant) wide channel down the length of the area and plant in it. When you do it that way you have to use the fabric staples or weight down the cut edges.

Dave

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 11:13AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
ongodsmountain

seysonn... Not looking for a green house at this time, my raised beds are long ago constructed (2011), and include four 14' tall hops beds... the raised bed complex is 4' wide, 32' long, and 16' high... Harbor freight is not going to help.. LOL

Not only that, but I would not trust their contraption under 4' of snow....

I need to build individual cold frames over each raised bed five of them 2'x4' and one long raised bed 2' x 28'...

Hopefully I can start building a dedicated green house this fall, but more likely next spring or fall... It will be concrete block around the base, and then an arched tunnel of solex on top..

pn brown.. did he use clear for the roof, or was that translucent?...

    Bookmark   May 26, 2013 at 2:26PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
GarlicFiend

My cold frame was very simple this year - 10 55 gallon water barrels and 6 bales of hay arranged in a square with the hay at the front and the barrels as the sides and back. This was then covered with a thick plastic sheet. When the temps were in the low 30s my cold frame was never below 55 all night. The 55 gallon barrels cost $10 a piece, the hay was $6 - and I subsequently used it for mulch. It was a low cost, high performance cold frame that has seen 500 plants go through successfully this year. I didn't even have to worry as much about overheating if I was late in venting the frame - all that water mass buffered the heat.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 10:03AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
pnbrown

Wally, I sure disagree with you, there are experts IME. In gardening as well as anything else.

Maybe the point is that within any given climate/soil paradigm still there are many successful ways to produce food crops. So that someone might be expert in a particular way of achieving that doesn't mean there aren't other ways.

This also means that an expert who moves from one climate to another often reverts back to neophyte status. For example, the florida forum gets constant threads from people who are expert gardeners in the mid-latitudes but find they are lost in the florida climate and soil. This makes me wonder about the possibility of a mid-latitude expert being an advisor to multigenerational tropical gardeners. My guess is that the expert in that case is learning a lot more than teaching.

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 7:05AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
t-bird(Chicago 5/6)

I agree with others, that this is not anything new. Theme and variations on composting.....

In regards to teaching other cultures, aren't we really saying - "hey that load of chemicals we sold you on in the 40's and 50's (60's.....70's)......we were wrong - bad idea - back to composting, back to natural methods"

if you think about anyone growing food for themselves, without the aid of garbage collection! - they are going to compost somehow.....

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 9:51AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
ceth_k(11)

annew21 said "I've seen see packets that say 6 inches is adequate, but that's garbage. "

He couldn't be more true. Okra is such gigantic plant it is a monstrosity in my garden! Even when it is blown down by strong wind it never die! I planted them for their pretty flower and now I don't know what to do with their high productivity of pods!
Here is one with its main branch literally lying on the ground:

Here's another one with a somehow more straight branch:

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 1:07AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
fusion_power

I would vote for 10 plants to give the amount of okra you indicate. They should be 18 to 24 inches apart in a row with 2 plants per hill. To get that number of healthy seedlings, put 5 seed in each hill, then thin to two seedlings per hill.

If I had a choice, I would grow a different variety. Clemson Spineless has to be picked daily to get tender pods.

DarJones

    Bookmark   May 28, 2013 at 7:22AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
missemerald(7 (Virginia))

stitchem, I'd be interested in hearing about your progress with this. Two years ago, we tried it with peaches and cream corn, blue lake beans and I don't recall what kind of summer squash. The squash died. The beans climbed the corn like crazy but never produced anything. The corn, however, was beautiful and tasty. We only did 3 sisters that one time though. Seemed like a great idea though. Good luck!

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 10:48PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
missemerald(7 (Virginia))

stitchem, I'd be interested in hearing about your progress with this. Two years ago, we tried it with peaches and cream corn, blue lake beans and I don't recall what kind of summer squash. The squash died. The beans climbed the corn like crazy but never produced anything. The corn, however, was beautiful and tasty. We only did 3 sisters that one time though. Seemed like a great idea though. Good luck!

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 10:49PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
2ajsmama

Yep, start the tomatoes April 1 and start maybe 50% more than I want to plant instead of 200%. I do have friends and family who want my extras, but market just starts too late here to sell any (mid June). Except maybe this year - I put an ad on Craigslist, we'll see if there are any takers.

    Bookmark   May 26, 2013 at 5:48PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
leannk92

I'm not sure I could wait until April 1st, but February 21st is definitely out, haha. And to add to your "only 50%" idea...when thinning out, don't save the unlucky ones.

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 9:37PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
jean001a(Portland OR 7b)

Could be most anything when it comes from compost. As was said, very possible mixed parentage (hybrid seed which won't come true.).

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 5:56PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Agree that it is most likely a cross of some kind or a hybrid throw back since it's coming from the compost pile.

Dave

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 6:03PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
kriswrite(zone 8)

I live where slugs and snails are ABUNDANT. Hand picking and either Sluggo or Cory's snail bait are really the only ways to go. Copper works, too, but if any bit of dirt, leaves, etc. that go over the copper will render it useless. And yep, you can eat slug/snail eaten leaves; just wash 'em first!

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 2:54PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
buenaventura43

Thank you. I will show all those responses to the family members so they will it .

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 5:06PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

It isn't Early Blight nor Late Blight nor even Southern Blight .

What you are seeing in merely environmental damage from the weather and the effects of the plant having been rootbound in its container.

Once you learn the causes and actual symptoms of the 3 different types of "blight" then you never have to panic. And you can learn much more about all of them over on the Tomatoes forum here.

Plus there are many pictures and info sheets available on all three as well as the other common tomato diseases available on the web and I linked one of the many resources below.

Dave

Here is a link that might be useful: TAMU - Tomato Problem Solver

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 4:52PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
planetes(7b (Cascadia - PNW))

Looks a bit like Septoria to me.. that's a fungal infection that the nightshade family is susceptible to (potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, etc)

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 1:32AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
annew21 (zone 7b NC)(7b NC)

Google "tomato spotted wilt virus". That's what it looks like to me. I believe this virus can infect potatoes as well.

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 1:50PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
dicot

Yeah, cutting it at the base was a bit severe. It might have kept producing new 'chokes at the axils if you just pruned the heads off. I'd just let it grow and fade on its own and then clean up.

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 2:04AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
sunnibel7 Md 7(7)

Wish I could help you more, but I've yet to have the wonderful problem you describe since none of my artichokes has made it through a winter yet. But here's a link to the UC Davis artichoke page. It's been a while since I read it, but maybe it will help you? Artichokes are perrenial there. Good luck!

Here is a link that might be useful: UC Davis Aritchoke Info

    Bookmark   May 27, 2013 at 11:05AM
Sign Up to comment
© 2015 Houzz Inc. Houzz® The new way to design your home™