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Clippings by flyingfish2 |
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RE: My 9 yr old is planting vegetables in JULY, help! (Follow-Up #3)
posted by: an_ill-mannered_ache on 06.25.2009 at 07:53 pm in Florida Gardening Forum since we don't have a faq, i thought i'd just write this up and paste it whenever this question comes up...
***************** Here are a baker's dozen of crops that I've had some success with for the months of June through September. They can all be started/added to the garden anytime in june and the first weeks of july... 1. Cassava. You'll need to find someone with cuttings. The cuttings root without a problem. I have started with pieces no larger than my thumb and, by the end of the season (Thanksgiving), they produced nice tubers. They are an easy, undemanding crop. The more care you take of them, the better they'll produce, but even without additional water or fertilizer, they'll still look good and produce something edible. Delicious boiled and mashed, or boiled and fried. On the herb front: Basil (especially Thai), scallions (which I start from roots bought at the grocer), Mexican tarragon (pretty, too!), wild arugula, fennel (currently under serious attack by the swallowtail cats), epazote, pápalo (not for the faint of heart!), leaf celery (which I use as a replacement for parsley). Rosemary, mint, and thyme struggle, but generally survive the summer. Summer savory and certain oreganos (large leafed) thrive. I also grow chaya, which is OK but more of an ornamental than a food plant. The butterflies love it. I'm sure there are other tropical crops to grow, but all of these crops are pretty easy. Many are perennial, and those that aren't can be started from saved seeds. NOTES: <none>
clipped on: 06.26.2009 at 09:13 pm last updated on: 06.26.2009 at 09:14 pm
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Summer veggies - who wants to try some seeds?
posted by: tomncath on 03.06.2009 at 07:45 pm in Florida Gardening Forum So, we all know very little in the way of veggies will grow here in the summer heat and humidity. Having said that, and you all know my seed fetish and how determined I am to find some summer replacements for squash and cucumbers, I've purchased several different heat-friendly veggie seeds to try this summer and would be happy to share a few with those of you that would like to give them a try. Below are links to what I've purchased, bear in mind that these are mostly melons eaten as cukes or squash so I've tagged them as such, drop me a line if you're interested....
Tom Metik Dark Green cuke
NOTES: <none>
clipped on: 06.23.2009 at 08:54 pm last updated on: 06.23.2009 at 08:54 pm
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RE: Cucumber Issues? (Follow-Up #5)
posted by: linchat on 06.18.2009 at 08:33 am in Florida Gardening Forum Think got seeds from Southern Seed Exchange and the variety is "Poinsette 76". I have been spraying with Thuricide which seems to be getting things under control, I have lost a few though to the pickleworms (pickle worms are the worms the burrow into the fruit right?).
Another member in the container garden forum recommended that it might be an iron issue as well. So I am going to head down to my local nursery this morning and see what I can come up with. I am suspecting an Iron deficiency myself. Thanks NOTES: <none>
clipped on: 06.23.2009 at 08:50 pm last updated on: 06.23.2009 at 08:51 pm
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