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elkwc

Garden update

elkwc
10 years ago

This gardening season has been as non typical as any I've seen. From setting record high highs in June to setting record low highs in July and back to setting record highs from August 10th till Sept 10th. This type of temp swings along with the constant high winds in May and June really separated the boys from the men this year. We have had some more rain. And the plants that have survived are starting to look better since the cool temps and rain arrived Tuesday. I've emptied 1.45 here but at the plant where I work out of there has been over 4 " and a coworker two miles south has had over six inches. Overall a better year than the last two although to this point my tomato production has been less than last year. I feel blessed for every drop we receive. The last heat spell really stressed a lot of plants and done several in as they were loaded with fruit from the cool spell in July and the first ten days of August.

I grew more hybrids this year than last. More than I plan on growing again anytime in the near future. The temps have limited fruit size a lot. And then after the rain, hail and really cool temps in early August a lot of the plants showed purple veins. The smaller fruit at that time that has been ripening over the last week or so has had some BER problems. Even on the in ground plants. The most I've ever experienced. I know it is from the lack of needed nutrient uptake at a critical point in the development of the fruit. The fruit growing during the July cool period was average to above average in size. The latest fruit overall has been smaller again from the same plants. The hybrids that so far has stood out have been Beefmaster and Big Beef. Early Girl was my first for a change and has been steady every since. I planted 8 grafted plants. I lost one to wind damage a few days after setting it out. I lost one to grower error and then 3 to some type of wilt. I had an in ground plant show wilt one morning after I watered the night before. I lost several stems on it but it recovered and still growing. Then in about two weeks a grafted plant to the north of it 4' wilted. I watched it a few days and then pulled it. Again after I watered the night before. Then a week later the Goliath hybrid grafted plant was loaded and fine when I came home from work and it was 107. I waited till almost sundown and set the time for the low flow drip tape for an hour. Around ten I was out there looking at things in the dark and noticed it was wilted bad. By the morning it was a goner. A week later the Cherokee Purple did the same thing. But besides that the grafted plants have handled the heat and drought stress well and set fruit well. Those I have left look better than anything else after the last heat spell except for the plants that had at least some shade(mostly container plants) and the plants I planted in early to mid July. They are producing now and survived the heat well. Of course they didn't have the foliage or fruit load the early planted plants had. Knocking on wood I haven't had anymore in about two weeks. Several of the plants have shed a lot of foliage. My Black Cherry plant looks pathetic but the fruit is ripening and since the cooldown it is showing new foliage growth. So far the varieties that have impressed me has been Burrell's Special, Glick's 18 Mennonite has been a trooper like normal even though it was beat up by the hail and other things. Cody's Paste and Cow's Tit are the first wispy varieties I've had any results from. I will continue to grow them and select seeds from the best plants. Ambrosia Gold has been unstable for me like some of the other J&L varieties I've grown. The one plant I have in a container has smaller fruit about the size of Sungold and as good or better flavor. Sweeter than Sungold. I'm normally not a sweet tomato lover but sure like these. So will be saving seeds. Brandyboy in the new raised bed had over 50 fruit and around 8' tall when the heat set in. It struggled during the heat. It survived. I have picked some and will be picking a few almost everyday now till frost probably. Size is varying greatly depending on when the fruit was set. I grew 4 Heinz varieties this year. 1350, 1439, 2653 and Heinz Classic. 1350 has been the most impressive. All but Classic are in containers and it took me a while to figure out how to water the new planting medium I used. Burrell's Special had done well. A nice sized all around type. Glick's 18 Mennonite has been a trooper like normal even after being beat up by the hail. Several keep telling me that Amish Canner does better for them. It hasn't for me. I am picking some fruit this year. It is smaller. Sweet Treats like always has performed well and many of those who have sampled it prefer it too Sungold. Not my preference but I will continue to grow it because it is so reliable and many like it. Due to my throwing my #1 tray list away this year I'm not for certain what I'm growing out of that tray except for Randy's Brandy. It is doing well again. I have two unknown pink beefsteak types that are doing well. I'm sure one of them has to be Greek Rose but I've never grown it before so not certain which one if either. Again not certain that I'm growing Grandma Suzy's this year but will for sure next year. Rutgers was one of the grafted plants and just now producing well. Started picking KB this week. Been picking Cherokee Purple for 3 weeks or so. So I'm in tomato heaven now that I have at least one of them to eat everyday. MOX311S is one I will continue to grow and select from. A good fruit setter. I also ate my first Mortgage Lifter fruit this year. From a grafted plant I purchased on sale in June at a local nursery. I'm growing 2 J&L Select plants this year. The first has large salad sized fruit but with just some blue at the top of the fruit. Better flavor than most blues though. Adds some color to salads. The second plant was planted late in mid July. Has set well but haven't picked any yet. The fruit are very pretty. Lots of color. Can't wait to taste it. If it tastes good I will save seed and continue to grow and select it. I purchased a Cheff Jeff's Homely Homer plant in the spring. It is producing well. I'm not impressed at all with the flavor or texture. Won't be growing it again. Top Gun fell victim to disease early. Two different plants. This is the 2nd year for that to happen. Probably won't be on my grow list for a while. Health Kick, 4th of July and Better Boy were just dependable performers till the others started producing. Celebrity and Jet Star haven't did as well as normal,
I planted fewer varieties of beans. Four Hopi types. Although 3 of the varieties are listed as pole and one as bush I would call all of them runners. They did well during the last heat spell. Woods Crazy Mountain is loaded. I haven't picked any yet. Was making sure I got plenty of seed first. I should have extra seed for anyone desiring any. Blue CoCo has done well although not as good as the Hopi varieties. Swiss Weinlander is the best tasting bean right off the vine I've ever tasted but it along with Landfruen and Fortex didn't handle the last heat spell well. The Yoeme Purple String, Hopi Pink, Hopi Yellow and Hopi Light Yellow didn't seem to miss a beat during the heat spell. Fowler and Eva's Chow Chow bean slowed down but survived and looking better now. I have one plant of White Settler Bush bean I hope to save seed from. So far it has done well.
Lemon Lime is a new cuke that I like. The cukes have done well. I will pick the first Armenian cuke today. The spaghetti squash has done well. I have a bug problem now. I haven't sprayed or used anything on the garden all summer. Going to see if I have any Garlic spray left I can use. I had a very good garlic harvest and have one bed ready to plant the first of October. I tilled under 3-4 ft tall Buckwheat last week. My peppers are disappointing mainly because I didn't start any plants this year and none of the varieties I really like. The okra has done well. The Grandfater Kurtz Cowhorn has stood out. I have finally got some Stewart's Zeebest. It hasn't done as well as some of the others though. Hill Country Red, Beck's Gardenville and Emerald Velvet have done well also. All of the seed I planted this year was 2-5 years old. Had good but slow germination on all of it. I hope to have Heavy Hitter seed to grow next year. The sweet potatoes were planted from mid June through mid July. The plants have really took off. Will see how many and what size of tubers they produce. I started all of the slips myself. I'm growing Hopi Red watermelon. I have 2 different colorings on them so will see how they taste and if they are both the same color. I picked my first Burrell's Jumbo melon last evening. My Cornfield pumpkins have 50-60 ft of vines but only 2 small fruit that I've found. So don't think I will pick any again this year. Next year I will plant them a lot earlier. I did take a lot of pictures right before the last heat spell. My computer has a new program to handle them and I haven't figured out yet how to move them to where I can upload them to Photobucket. If I ever do I will post the link. Jay

Comments (6)

  • slowpoke_gardener
    10 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    jay it is so good to hear your report. my year has not been any thing to brag about, but the okra, pumpkins and squash has done much better than I expected. I have been most satisfied with the butternut, only because I know to do with it. my most productive plant was the Brazilian butternut. I harvested 7 squash that totaled near 200 lbs., that is a lot of food from one seed, but what do you do with fruit that large. I may still have a 100lbs on the vine, but I am letting the squash bug kill out all my squash because I have no place to store it. my cornfield pumpkin have done very well. 4 seeds have produced at least 35 pumpkins up 35lbs ea. my heavy hitter okra has done well and I expect you will have plenty seeds next year.

    larry

  • elkwc
    Original Author
    10 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Larry are you the one who sent the Emerald Velvet seeds to Carol a few years ago to send to me? If so it was part of those seeds that I still had left that I planted this year. And I ended up with 100% germination from them. I know many say okra seeds have a short germination life. That is one reason I didn't buy any seeds this year and decided to just use up some of the left overs I had from previous years. Andy why I grew so many different varieties.
    I tired the first Armenian cuke today. I like them. Overall I can't complain about this year. I just hope we continue to climb out of the drought and our temps tend to moderate some. Jay

  • toucan2
    10 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Aaaaah, the trials and tribulations of gardening!
    Though a newbie to raised bed veggie gardens, I spent lots of time online learning from the "pros", so with lots of patience, perseverance and water, my efforts have not been a complete bust.

    Due to all the extreme weather we had in May and June, it's any wonder that I got as far as I did with most of my plants. Especially the tomatoes! Battled one blight after another. Organically. But just when everything was looking great again and starting to produce, along came the spider mites. I'm still having to check everything 2x a day for them.

    My best producer so far - out of 13 varieties, is the Heat Master. Fruit is quite small but has a great taste. Brandywine and Arkansas Traveler have topped out at over 8', but the Traveler is the only one producing fruit.

    Bought a 6 pack of very small Celebrities in late June, and they are just now flowering a bit. The Parks Whopper and Big Boy are nearing 6' now and flowering too, so I've got my fingers crossed that I get a few pounds of maters in before the first frost.

  • elkwc
    Original Author
    10 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    TouCan2,
    Nice looking plants. Although I've gardened more years than I can remember this is my first year for rasied beds also. The reason I made it was because black walnut roots had migrated into that area and was making it hard to grow anything there. So far the results have been great. I used a raised bed mix from Soil Mender. It retains moisture well but also drains well. It is next to the eaves of the garage so drainage was important. My plants here usually don't get as big as they do elsewhere. And that is for several reasons. The weather conditions here are so severe that if a plant is in the open and carrying a fruit load their size is limited by the environment. Where plants have windbreaks(trees, buildings, ect) they will get taller and also in the milder years. If I put shade cloth over the top it helps also. I read a post in the Soil Mender site about a man in the Tulia, TX area who grows his garden under 10-20% shade cloth. Mine most years is in the open with some minor wind protection and it fends for itself. I fertilize with the intent of growing a large root structure more than foliage and plant size. The root structure is all that kept many of my plants going during the last heat spell.
    Celebrity hasn't done much this year. I remember now why I quit growing it several years ago. Arkansas Marvel is the only plant I haven't picked a fruit from and may not. The hail hit it hard. Not only did it beat it up it stressed the plant and it aborted all blooms and took a couple of weeks to even start recovering. It has one small fruit that I doubt has time to mature. All of the plants I planted in July have fruit and have either produced or will have ripe fruit soon. This is a typical year in that the plants planted after Memorial Day have out performed those planted in late April and early May. Jay

  • sorie6 zone 6b
    10 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    I love the pvc pipe trellis. Now I know what to do with all that DH has left over from making marshmallow blasters!!
    Thanks.

  • Erod1
    10 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Very nice trellis system! I saved that pic to use for next year.

    My beefsteaks are over 10 feet tall and bent over and growing into the next plant and tangled with the other plants, etc. it's like a little jungle. But, 1 of the 2 is still making plenty of fruit so I will leave it. I will pull the other when I get the time.

    My parks Whopper is about 6-7 feet tall and loaded with green tomatoes now, and I had been picking several a day from it up until about Thursday of last week.

    I pulled one container tomato last month, it was a goner.

    My Husky Red container plant has something wrong with it, the leaves started getting crispy at the bottom and within a week it had moved all the way to the top leaves. So it has half crispy brown leaves, and half green, still has fruit so I will leave it. I have been having BER problems with it, so if that continues I will pull it.

    My unknown plant is still producing like mad, it looks like the Whopper, but tastes different. It's actually 2 plants, when the cutworm got it I stuck the top back in the ground and both the top and the stem grew back and are producing. Who woulda thunk it!

    My last container plant that we suspected had Spotted wilt virus is loaded down. It still has funny spots on the fruit, but it has the best flavor of any of the plants I've planted this year. It's the one that has an already salty flavor.

    It seems that half of us had an outstanding tomato year and the other half had a bad one. My son only got 4 little tomatoes this year.

    Thanks for the thread, glad your garden is still doing as well as it is. I just love having fall tomatoes from spring plants.

    I think I may put a little tomato tone on mine to see if I can add a few nutrients to them that they are most surely deficient in this late in the year.

    Emma