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  • #16
    Pics of garden now

    Tomato plant - indeterminate beef master - mom gave it to me, bought it from the amish.


    3 cucu*mber plants - still harvesting cuke's


    baby carrots next to tomato and in the foreground are a second crop of green beans - we'll if we can get some more this year.


    All thats left of the green beans I harvested...ate a bunch and gave a bunch away...My goal next year is to keep track of the amount that I harvest.

    When I insert the images they show up as a pic but when I save the post they switch to a link...anyone else ever see this?
    Last edited by 610Alpha; 08-20-2011, 10:05 PM.
    "It's a trap!!!!" -- Admiral Ackbar

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    • #17
      It took us about two years to get our raised beds soil right for the veggies we grow. Boston Pickling cukes work well for us; wife has 16 quarts of sweets and dills put up.

      We use top setting onions because they will produce next years crop which we have already planted and is up.

      Our soft neck garlics did well but wife had surgery so re-planing is delayed.

      Indeterminate tomatoes did well; watered the bases only; have bees for pollination. No high nitrogen fertilizer but added calcium to wipe out blossom rot.

      Harvested two pickings of bush beans. Okra is doing well. Spring lettuce did great as did the greens and cabbage.

      10-10--10 is the basis of our use for even the berry bushes and Mullberry trees. Learn what works for you and when and why and how to germinate the seeds then transplant it; soil temperature and Ph level is critical.

      Laus Deo
      overbore
      .

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      • #18
        Where are you? You don't list a real location. If you are in Texas as an example the heat just killed everything. also lack of rain fall. If you are in Iowa you sure had plenty of rain. the low areas still have some of the water. did you put in new soil in the boxes? or did you use the clay in your area? I know here in Texas my daughter put in raised beds back in spring and it has been miserable for her to grow anything.

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        • #19
          As Grinnan Barrett said, it depends where you are. Most things I grow do best in the ground, but then I haven't got clay soil. In my experience, raised garden beds dry out too quickly and the soil gets too hot. Try digging down a few inches into the soil to see if your watering gets to the roots of the plants. It is better to give several long deep waterings each week when needed than watering every day. When you water every day, the roots are not encouraged to go deep, but sit near the surface of the soil and suffer from heat stress.

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          • #20
            I live directly on salt water. The soil has some salt contamination. Growing in raised beds is the only way for me to go.

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Grinnan Barrett View Post
              Where are you? You don't list a real location. If you are in Texas as an example the heat just killed everything. also lack of rain fall. If you are in Iowa you sure had plenty of rain. the low areas still have some of the water. did you put in new soil in the boxes? or did you use the clay in your area? I know here in Texas my daughter put in raised beds back in spring and it has been miserable for her to grow anything.
              I'm in W. TN.,
              I have put down some 10-10-10. That along with a little cooler temps have brought my garden back to life. In fact I just planted some head lettuce and Brocolli. I may not have as much of a harvest as I wanted, but something will be better then nothing.
              Mike
              If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy.
              ~James Madison

              You will eat your Brocoli and like it, or I'll have to TAX you.
              No more Big Gulps for you either!

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              • #22
                Raised beds do lose moisture faster, mulch/straw helps a lot to retain moisture and keep the soil temp down in the summer. The trade off is the soil gets warmer sooner in the spring and you don't have to till it each spring.

                Blossom end rot on tomatoes - an easy way to add calcium (did it this year for the first time & it made a huge difference) is save egg shells (rinse them really well & get the membrane off if you can), then grind them (I used a mortar & pestle, anything heavy will work), put that eggshell "dust" onto the dirt around the main stalk then water it in. It can take a LOT of eggshells. I think I used 5 dozen to treat 6 plants (all indeterminates) once when it first showed up in middle June. We are now the only one of our friends in the area (NE KS) whose plants are still producing and throwing new flower sets.

                We did water almost every evening - at the roots only - during the heat and instead of using Sevin or something like that (not opposed to it, just $ this year) for the caterpillars, wasps, aphids, and other critters we sprayed almost nightly with a dishsoap/water mixture. You want it "bubbly", it coats them with bubbles or something and they can't breathe through it. Also had caught two "garden" spiders, the black ones with very bright colored stripes, elsewhere in the yard and put them directly into the tomato area. Every evening you could tell they were eating well because they were bigger.

                Anyway, my 2 cents

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                • #23
                  I know this is an old thread but some of you had some ideas you were going to be trying. I'm curious as to how some of those things may have worked out. Had been accustomed to having a very large garden in Maine that was well seasoned with fertilizer, lime and cow manure. Things would practically jump out of the ground. Couldn't grow potatoes to save my soul. Bugs ate them. In our new location the soil is rocky/sandy and not one bit inviting to approach for a garden. Have thought about bringing in a well seasoned load of manure and turning it into the crap soil with the hope of maybe being able to grow something next summer. Raised beds might have to be the other option. This is New Hampshire so the growing season just isn't that long.

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                  • #24
                    We fertilized with rabbit pellets. The don't have to compost and despite the drought and heat, most of our stuff did pretty well.

                    We won't put our watermelons in raised beds again though. They invaded everything. We are going to move them to the other side of the house and they can just go as crazy as they want!

                    We are putting some stuff in a traditional garden next year. Corn, potatoes, sweet potatoes, and probably turnips (turnips are mostly livestock fodder).

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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Maid Marion View Post
                      I know this is an old thread but some of you had some ideas you were going to be trying. I'm curious as to how some of those things may have worked out. Had been accustomed to having a very large garden in Maine that was well seasoned with fertilizer, lime and cow manure. Things would practically jump out of the ground. Couldn't grow potatoes to save my soul. Bugs ate them. In our new location the soil is rocky/sandy and not one bit inviting to approach for a garden. Have thought about bringing in a well seasoned load of manure and turning it into the crap soil with the hope of maybe being able to grow something next summer. Raised beds might have to be the other option. This is New Hampshire so the growing season just isn't that long.
                      The guy I learned about raised beds from lives down by the Ozarks, clay and rocks. I use Cotton Burr compost, Rice Hulls, and Peat Moss in my raised bed. I add in some Azomite and some Fertilizer. I watered every night unless it rained. The compost mix I use allows for excellent root growth and it is so loose that I can wiggle my hand down to the bottom of the bed.
                      "It's a trap!!!!" -- Admiral Ackbar

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                      • #26
                        We have had raised beds now for three years. Have had very good results. The only thing I have decided to do next year is move the corn out of a raised bed.(wind kept blowing them over) We are going to try a quarter acre plot for the corn. I was told that the more corn you can plant the better it will do.
                        Be Prepared, Plan for the unexpected.

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by Texas Patriot View Post
                          We have had raised beds now for three years. Have had very good results. The only thing I have decided to do next year is move the corn out of a raised bed.(wind kept blowing them over) We are going to try a quarter acre plot for the corn. I was told that the more corn you can plant the better it will do.
                          I have had good luck with raised beds, but corn hasn't worked that well for me either.

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                          • #28
                            On corn, can't remember where I saw it... but they had cattle panels horizontally at about a foot off the ground and then again at about four feet. Might have been on Len Pense's site...

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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by MustangGal View Post
                              On corn, can't remember where I saw it... but they had cattle panels horizontally at about a foot off the ground and then again at about four feet. Might have been on Len Pense's site...
                              Yep Len Pense uses a cattle/hog panel placed horizontally. I will have to watch his video again but I don't think he uses 2 panels.
                              "It's a trap!!!!" -- Admiral Ackbar

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                              • #30
                                I figured if I plant a 1/4 acre of corn it would help hold itself up and not blow down in the wind as easily. We also want to be able to store it for the winter and the 40 stalks we had only produced about 25 little pathetic ears. I've learned that the more you have the better it will do because of pollination.
                                Be Prepared, Plan for the unexpected.

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