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homegrown14

Planting melons to vines grow downward

Homegrown14
10 years ago

I'm new to the site (first post) and this is only my second year of gardening. We planted watermelons and cantaloupe last year in a small raised bed (2 plants per mound of dirt) and they did amazing. This year I'm trying to expand my garden and want to plant melons at the top of a hill on my property. I plan to do a raised bed at the top of the approximately 4ft tall hill (our soil is very rocky and mostly clay) to allow the vines to grown down the hill. Has anyone done this or do you think it will be successful? It's not a steep hill and I believe the melons will have no problem resting on the side of the hill. Thanks so much!

Comments (2)

  • slowpoke_gardener
    10 years ago

    There are many others on here that would be much better than I to answer this question, but when you say melons, clay, rocks and hill. I think will you be able to supply the water need. I don't think the melons will be concerned about the hill, but will they be happy if you cant supply enough water to them.

    Judging from the mental image I get from reading you post, I have to think that if I wanted to plant melons on that hill, why not just amend the soil already there as deeply as possible and plant in it. You already have the hill for drainage. My first choice would be to plant on somewhat level ground..

    Larry

  • Okiedawn OK Zone 7
    10 years ago

    I agree with Larry, particularly if you're in an area that is relatively dry in summer. Melons like lots of moisture (though not excessive moisture as they mature because it ruins their flavor) and if they are on top of a hill, too much of the moisture may run downhill before soaking deeply into the soil. It kinda depends on how high the hill is and also on how heavy the clay is. Most people here in my area grow their melons in the relatively flat bottom lands, particularly where there is sugar sand or sandy loam that allows their roots to grow freely.

    I grow melons in a narrow band of sandy soil at one end of my mostly clay garden. I've also grown them in highly-amended clay soil in raised beds, but in a rainy year, that soil can stay too wet for them and then the plants themselves will have disease issues.

    By the use of the term hill, if you mean a slight rise in the land, it likely will be okay and won't drain too fast, and will function like a raised bed. Still, without knowing if you are in an area that averages 40-50" of rain per year versus one that averages 10-20", we're only guessing.

    I even tailor my melon planting to the weather I anticipate we will have in a given year. If I am expecting summer rainfall to be scarce, I plant the melons at grade level in sandy soil amended with compost. In that looser sandy soil they can spread their roots endlessly in the search for more moisture. If I am expecting late spring and summer rainfall to be heavy, I plant in the highest raised bed I have, which is highly amended clay, so excess moisture can drain away from the plants.

    Sometimes you just have to experiment with planting different ways in order to figure out what works best in your location, with your soil and with your average rainfall. We have highly variable soils and highly variable rainfall amounts in various parts of OK, so what works best in an area with plentiful rainfall and well-draining sandy loam might not work best in a different area with dense clay and very low rainfall.

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