24,795 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening



> but after a few years of failed crops for various reasons I am trying to be extra vigilant this year.>
Vigilance is good but at some point we all have to accept that sometimes garden crops fail. It happens for lots of reasons and many of them are beyond our control. That's regardless of the size of the garden or how many years experience one may have. It is the very nature of gardening.
The perfect garden with a perfect harvest is an impossible dream. And focusing on that goal can quickly turn any of us into an obsessive-compulsive gardener inclined to panic and over-react. That not only takes all the fun out of gardening and defeats one of its primary purposes - relaxation and a sense of accomplishment - but it usually leads to actions that create more problems for us and for the garden.
Relax and enjoy your garden. Nature will take its course no matter how much you fight it.
Dave


Hi - the 'eggs' & ants are aphids plus ants could be feeding on the aphids' excrement (a.k.a. honeydew) - or on the plant's nectar. Okra has nectaries, I've learned, which are sort of pores on the plants that produce nectar. You can wash aphids & ants off w/ a hose. The aphids can do harm, since their feeding can damage/distort leaves & tissues, but ants by themselves won't harm okra by feeding on the nectar, in fact they may help as pollinators. I do not see ants in your photo, so they may be after the nectar & not the aphids' honeydew.
The holes in the okra leaves are definitely done by something else, but they look healed over to me, meaning the damage is old & pests are likely long gone. It could've been perpetrated by caterpillars, grasshoppers or slugs/snails, I think. The 'rule of thumb', BTW, is that plants can lose up to 1/3 of their foliage & still be OK.
It is hard to determine if that is upper or lower foliage on the tomatoes. I don't worry too much about damage on lower leaves, since they tend to get scraggly w/ age, but if it's on new growth @ the top, I think that may be cause for concern. I remove dead leaves regularly from my tomato plants.

According to this, maybe it's a mutation on chromosome 8 and/or 2. If you plant out alot of corn you'll see all sorts of interesting mutations.

I'd agree. Pollination is the problem. SVB will damage the entire plant.. not just the squash. The borer eats the plant from the inside.. so imagine the same symptoms in your plant if a large part of the main stalk was cut off... the plant would begin to die.. wilt.. if your fruit are dying and your plant is fine, try hand - pollinating and see what happens. If you don't know how: Take a male flower and pluck it from the plant. Pull the pedals from the flower, leaving just the little yellow stick covered in pollen in the center of the flower to the stem. Now take that pollen covered stamen, and rub it on the yellow part in the middle of the female flower (you can sing Marvin Gaye's "let's get it on" while you do :D ). Make sure to leave the female flower attached to the plant, and see if that helps.

I'm so glad to hear you think it may just be a pollination problem, that's easy enough to fix! I also have tomatoes growing fairly near by and no blossom end rot there, and they are on the same soaker hose so getting pretty consistent watering. I think I will try hand pollinating yellow one too, as it doesn't seem to be fruiting either, and while I often talk to my plants we will see what my new choice in music does for the garden :)




Yeah, I see now they were all male blossoms, so I guess they would have fallen off anyway, so I got a bit worried for nothing. And, there are still plenty of other male blossoms still flowering.
For a hobby that's supposed to be relaxing, gardening sure can make you anxious sometimes!

Winter squash are noted as such because of their long growing season and winter keeping- not because they will grow during the winter. They die with the cold just like summer squash does. Well, I suppose a winter squash might grow during the winter down in the deep south, lol.
But will you see a harvest? Maybe, I dunno, never tried growing in zone 2. You might want to invest in a frost blanket or a season extender of that sort to cap over your plant in the fall if you need to and just need an extra week or two of season for the squashes to get fully ripe.

If your is the Vegetable Spaghetti about the same season as a Howden Pumpkin. Your plants sound like they are about a month to a month and a half old. So if your temps hold you should harvest in September maybe late August due to your long daylight hours. These take approximately 4 months from seed.

Lol, wish they had an edit option for these comments, for just that reason.. spelling mistakes! :) You don't really need to "do" anything, but hey if you're excited and you just want to be hands-on, there's nothing wrong with going out there and gently maneuvering the stems closer to your trellis if they happen to be happily vining the other direction. However, a word of caution... cucumber vines aren't like squash fines, etc. They're not hardy and meaty... they're like crisp, hollow straws and won't hesitate to Snap if you bend them the wrong way... and there's really no recovering. That's not to say that cukes aren't resilient growers, but if you happen to snap off most of the plant at the base, you're out of luck so be careful. :)

Heh Miss, you can edit your posts- you just click the edit button in the upper right hand corner of your post :)
But for the cukes... If the CRW has holes too big or the spacing of your cuke isn't right for it to want to grab onto the wire, you can always use a bit of twine in the inbetween areas to help it out a bit. The cukes want to climb all on their own.

Thank you GardenDan. I'm going to go check under the leaves and see if there is anything. I can't find any real evidence of voles. I've contacted the Clemson university to see if they can identify the issue and will post if I finally determine anything. My father in law told me he planted 50 tomato plants here about 3 years ago and he lost every one of them to this problem. Others seem to be wilting now.



Thanks! I suppose it's worth a shot since they're pretty much free lol Our last frost is mid may, and first frost is mid-end of sept so well see I guess.
From what I've heard (I haven't grown them yet), the leaves of sweet potatoes are edible. I say plant, find out for sure about the leaves, and have a it!