Midsummer in the Garden - Succession Planting
Tomatoes ripen heavy on the vine and zucchini pokes out from under
every leaf. But if you yearn for the tastes of sweet lettuce, plump
carrots, and pungent radishes (long gone in the summer heat), you
can start a new garden now. Late season vegetables are the garden’s
second act producing tasty harvests until frost draws the curtain
on the growing season.
It's time to plant--again!
Starting in mid July, and extending though the middle of August,
you can plant many of the crops that you did in the spring. Peas,
beans, carrots, lettuce, and broccoli--all vegetables you enjoyed
from your late spring garden--grow quickly in the hot summer sun,
ripening just as the weather starts to cool down. In fact, many
gardeners believe that frost improves the flavor of crops such as
broccoli kale, and cauliflower.
And if you had been really organized this spring you would have
planned for a succession of harvests and would have re-planted many
crops as often as every two weeks. But let’s suppose that
you haven’t quite managed to be that organized. What can you
plant now, the first week of August?
How to plant a second-harvest
Planting second-harvest seeds in the garden requires a little extra
care to get them started. Here’s how:
1. Speed up germination by soaking seeds in water overnight before
planting.
2. Plant seeds in furrowed rows, cover with rich soil or compost,
and water well (the furrows will help direct the water to the seeds,
and help create a strong root system).
3. Water well and daily unti the seedlings appear. Use a mulch to
minimize evaporation. If drip irrigation is possible, use it.
4. Provide a sunscreen protection to your seedlings, such as row
covers, that will help lower soil temperatures and shield the tender
plants from the sun’s intense rays.
5. Gradually remove the screened protection once the seedlings are
established.
6. Cover tender crops in the evening when there is a danger of frost.
Although some cool-weather crops, such as carrots and radishes can
be sowed directly in the soil in hot temperatures, you’ll
have a better harvest if you wait until the scorching summer temperatures
subside before you plant. Or, start longer season crops, such as
cauliflower, broccoli and Brussels sprouts in another, more protected
location, and transplant the seedlings into the garden later on.
Second-time around success
Second harvest plants ripen slowly in the cool late summer temperatures.
Here are some tips for caring for seedlings:
· Keep an eye on weeds. Late-summer vegetables generally
have less competition with weeds than their early-spring planted
counterparts, but you should keep any new weed seeds from germinating
and competing with your seedlings for moisture.
· Protect seedlings from the sun. Cover seedlings with row
covers (late summer crops need protection from the sun, just as
early-spring crops needed protection from the cold).
· Plant seedlings in the evening. To give your seedlings
a fighting chance, plant them in the evening, so they can enjoy
several hours of cool temperatures before experiencing a full day
in the sun.
· Keep seedlings well watered. Hot summer sun can fry young
plants that don’t receive enough moisture.
· Watch for pests. Although there are less bugs midsummer,
be sure to keep cabbage broccoli, and cauliflower sprayed with bT
at 10-day intervals and after each rain.
· Replace what you took. After harvesting your second crop,
make sure to replace the nutrients in the soil that two vegetable
gardens used for the summer. Nourish the soil with a generous helping
of compost.
What to plant in late summer
Here’s a list of late-summer crops that will produce a second
harvest at the end of the growing season. Select quick-growing,
heat or cold-tolerant varieties (depending upon when and what you
plant) that will sprint toward maturity, then hold up against early
cold weather. Here are some suggestions, with the number of days
after planting that they can be harvested:
Beets
‘Big Red Hybrid’ (55 days), ‘Burpee’s
Golden’ (55 days), and ‘Ruby Queen’ (55 days).
Broccoli
‘Packman Hybrid’ (60 days), ‘Green Goliath ’
(55 days), and ‘Green Comet Hybrid’ (40 days).
Bush beans
‘Astrel French Filet’ (55 to 60 days), ‘Derby
Green’ (55 days), ‘Goldcrop Yellow Wax’ (54 days),
and ‘Jade Green Pod’ (56 days).
Cabbage
‘Dynamo Hybrid’, an All-America Selections winner, ‘Early
Golden Acre Year’ (60 days), and ‘Early Stonehead Hybrid’
(65 days). Carrots: ‘Babette’ (57 days), ‘Little
Finger’ (65 days), and ‘Thumbelina’ (60 days).
Cauliflower
‘Snowball Self Blanching’ (72 days), ‘Snow King
Hybrid’ (60 days), and ‘Snow Crown Hybrid’ (60
days).
Kale
‘Blue Curled Vates’ (60 days)
Lettuce
Bibb-type ‘Buttercrunch’ (68 days), and the looseleafs
‘Red Sails’ (43 days), ‘Simpson Elite’ (48
days), and ‘Black Seeded Simpson’ (45 days). Plant seeds
every two weeks so you can enjoy the crop longer. The looseleaf
types are “cut and come again”
Mustard Greens
‘Early Mizuna’ (begin harvesting within 14-21 days)
Peas
‘Early Crop Maestro’ (61 days), ‘Early Crop Progress
No. 9’ (63 days), and ‘Sugar Snap Edible Podded’
(68 days). Peas really like cool weather so if it is an exceptionally
hot summer, don’t bother.
Pepper (or Garden) Cress
10 -12 days Edible flowers as well as leaves.
Radishes
‘Sparkler’ (25 days), ‘Cherry Belle’ (22
days), or ‘Early Scarlet Globe ’ (23 days), and ‘Easter
Egg II Blend’ (30 days).
Spinach
‘Bloomsdale Long Standing’ (45 days) and ‘Olympia
Hybrid’ (42 days).
Brussels sprouts
‘Jade Cross,’ an All-America Selections winner (88 days).
New Zealand Spinach
V ery heat tolerant and bolt resistant. A good substitue for conventional
spinach. ‘Cut and come again”.
Swiss chard
‘Rhubarb ’ (60 days) and ‘Lucullus’ (60
days).
Turnip
There are many varieties, all quite quick growing. ‘All Seasons’
(28 days) and ‘Early Italian White red Top’
SOURCE - Adapted from www.garden.excite.com
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