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To: 4everontheRight; Augie; Apple Pan Dowdy; Aevery_Freeman; ApplegateRanch; ArtDodger; AloneInMass; ...

2 posted on 08/21/2021 6:15:01 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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14 Ways to Extend Your Growing Season

Most gardeners I know plant in late spring and then sit back and watch their gardens grow. Our family, on the other hand, keeps planting and planting and planting. As a result, while others complain about the price of lettuce, we're enjoying virtually free salads. While others are using up the last of the season's green tomatoes, our family is still slicing into juicy, ripe, freshly picked tomatoes.

No, we aren't gardening geniuses. We just happen to prefer fresh vegetables, so we take advantage of every trick in the book to keep our veggies growing. Here are 14 ways you too can extend your growing season.

1. Know Your Garden’s Microclimate

Most climate maps cover areas that are too broad to be useful for any specific garden. The latest USDA map is better than the old one but still isn't truly accurate. The only way to know your garden's microclimate is to keep your own records over the years. But, since the weather is never the same two years in a row, even your own records will, at best, provide averages.

Not only does the weather change from year to year, but mini areas within your garden may differ significantly from one another. Is part of your garden shaded by trees or buildings? Is some area shielded from cold or drying wind by a fence or shrubs? Are there low spots where cold air and frost readily settle?

Select vegetables described as growing best in your general climate. If your garden has more than one microclimate, try different varieties in different spots. Some may do better than others in certain spots; some may do better one year than in the next.

2. Plant Often

Successive planting is the best way to stretch the harvest over a period of time. One successive planting method is to simultaneously sow seeds and set out started seedlings of the same variety. The transplants will be ready for harvest before the direct-seeded veggies are.

Another successive planting method is to replant at periodic intervals. Sow radishes and spinach once a week; sow beans, beets, carrots, scallions, and salad greens every two weeks; sow cucumbers and summer squash once a month. Since you can't tell in advance just how warm or cool the season will be, keep planting until seeds stop sprouting well.

A third method for ensuring a successive harvest is to sow seeds of several different varieties that mature at different rates. Planting rows of different varieties is an easy way to extend the harvest of corn and peas. For carrots, radishes, and salad greens, you have the option of mixing the seeds of different varieties together and planting them all in the same row.

In our garden we get the greatest variety of salad greens over the longest period of time by both mixing different kinds of lettuce seed together and planting the mix every two weeks. We do the same with radishes. When our weather suddenly turns hot (as it does every year), some varieties will run for cover, while others continue supplying us with fresh salads for a few weeks longer.

Continue successive planting as the weather warms, replacing spring crops with summer crops and summer crops with fall veggies. Besides extending the harvest, successive planting has an additional advantage — it keeps the soil productive and thereby discourages weeds.

More ideas at the link below from Mother Earth News:

5 posted on 08/21/2021 6:30:57 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
CLICK ON THE PICTURE OF THE STRAWBERY CREAM PUFFS TO RETURN TO THE 8/14 to 8/20 GARDENING THREAD!

Poof sorry image href gone!

CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW TO LINK TO RESOURCE AREA. BOOKS, MAGAZINES, GARDENING SEEDS, SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT, AND INTERESTING GARDENING LINKS HARVESTED FROM PREVIOUS GARDENING THREADS!"

Poof...image deleted!

(The resource area is posted at the end of the the July 3-6 Gardening Thread beginning after post 112!)


8 posted on 08/21/2021 6:49:45 AM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission (Recipe for cream puffs is at post 51 last weeks thread!)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Cukes!

You want cukes?

Have I got cukes.


10 posted on 08/21/2021 7:07:00 AM PDT by left that other site (If you do not stand firm in your faith, you will not stand at all. (Isaiah 7:9))
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I live in NW Florida, where the soil is sandy, salty, devoid of minerals and nutrients and won’t hold moisture more than two days.

To get veggies or grass to grow is a constant feeding and watering.

Yet weeds prosper here without doing anything at all. They will grow in bare sandy spots that have no organic material, not one ounce of fertilizer and no water.

If science ever can figure out why this is and can make veggies do the same we will be in heaven................


50 posted on 08/23/2021 5:43:50 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin; waterhill
My new "best friend" ....

Drove in 3 6-ft T-posts to hold up my giant sunflowers about a hour ago. Ropes & a 3 ft metal small post (not a T-post, more like something for a low electric fence) were not doing the job & they were leaning badly & pulling up roots again.

I did have to get up on a step ladder, but driving the posts was not a problem. Three things I REALLY like:

Thanks again for the suggestion, waterhill! 😀

53 posted on 08/23/2021 2:03:18 PM PDT by Qiviut (Faith is the antidote to fear. Mindset: be a victor, not a victim.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

That’s the truth.


70 posted on 08/27/2021 5:43:32 PM PDT by tob2 (So much to do; so little desire to do it.)
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