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Growing Your Own Vegetables
> A tasty idea
for small space gardening
> Container basics
> The right mix
> Choosing your veggies
> Planting and care
A
tasty idea for small space gardening
Plant your favorite vegetables in containers
for a small space garden that yields a harvest of fresh produce.
If you have a sunny place on your patio or deck, you have
enough room to grow a wide variety of container veggies. Growing
vegetables in pots puts the plants within easy reach for a
quick snack or meal. Imagine the convenience of fresh tomatoes,
lettuce, radishes, beans and peppers that thrive just steps
from your kitchen door.
Stretch your growing space by arranging
containers closely in groups, or place pots on pedestals and
stands to bring them to eye level. Wall pots, window boxes,
and boxes fastened to railings can create garden space where
there didn't seem to be any. Stick a single or double type
Shepard's Hook in the ground near your door to support hanging
baskets of cherry tomatoes, snap peas or strawberry vines.
Grow veggies with vertical impact like pole beans in pots
next to lower growing plants. Train climbing vines of squash
or cucumbers along a railing or trellis to create height and
save space. Planters can also be attached to a nearby fence,
lamppost or tree.
Container
basics
Although it only takes a few containers
to bring home grown food to your table, be sure to choose
the right size and shape pot for each plant. A good container
should be large enough to provide room for soil and roots.
Since proper drainage is the key to growing healthy veggies,
the pot must have bottom drainage and enough headroom for
proper watering.
Think big when buying containers. A
common mistake is using a pot that's too small. If the container
is too small, the plant may topple over, become root bound,
dry out or not develop properly. When a pot is too large,
the soil holds water too long, and the plant's roots will
rot. Most veggies grow rapidly in a container that holds at
least 5 gallons of soil.
Terra cotta or clay pots are a natural
choice for container grown vegetables. They are available
in shades of earthy beige, brown, pink, or off-white, depending
on the clay used to make them. Unglazed clay pots are popular
due to their low cost and their ability to allow air and water
to move through their walls.
Plastic is among the most practical
of all container materials. Good plastic pots are tough, tolerate
freezing and thawing, and retain moisture well. Improvements
in plastic design have resulted in affordable prices and a
variety of container styles previously unavailable. Plastic
pots with grapevine designs and basket weave patterns are
popular choices, but you can select from a huge variety of
other attractive embossed containers.
Wooden containers, made from rot resistant
redwood, cedar or cypress, require more frequent watering
but provide insulation from extreme temperatures. Try versatile
concrete, cast-iron metal, fiberglass, polyurethane foam,
pressed paper, or even wire. For something really unusual
consider an old wheelbarrow, iron pot, whiskey barrel or half
barrel. Just make sure the container is large enough for the
vegetable you're planting, provides good drainage and gets
a lot of sun.
The right
mix
Plant your vegetables in the highest
quality potting mix you can find. Nothing determines the success
of vegetables grown in containers as much as a good potting
mix. It may surprise you to learn that the best potting mixes
do not actually contain garden soil. Instead, they are made
with ingredients such as sphagnum peat moss, composted bark,
vermiculite, perlite, and sand.
When shopping for potting mix, look
for a bag that lists quality ingredients and gives a satisfaction
guarantee. In general, veggies prefer a potting mix that holds
plenty of moisture but won't be too soggy. A standard mix
is designed to sustain plant growth with little or no enhanced
growth capability. A premium mix includes additions such as
fertilizer, wetting agents, and extra water-holding capacity.
Although they're more expensive, premium mixes are usually
a better buy because they take the guesswork out of container
gardening.
A
veggie for all seasons |
| Warm season
vegetables do best when temperatures average 65
to 95 degrees. They thrive in warm summers and
should be planted after the danger of frost is
over in the spring. Favorite warm season vegetables
include beans, cucumbers, eggplant, peppers, summer
squashes and tomatoes.
Plant cool season vegetables
several weeks before the last spring frost is
expected in your location. They grow best when
daily temperatures reach only 55 to 75 degrees.
The most popular cool season vegetables are beets,
broccoli, cabbage, carrots, green onions, scallions,
kale, peas, radishes and spinach.
You can even bring herbs
inside for the winter. Be sure to cut them back
about 3 inches or repot them before they start
their indoor growing season. Chives, garlic, parsley,
rosemary and thyme do better than other herbs
when placed near or on a sunny windowsill. Try
hanging a group of cooking herbs in a wide, flat
basket near a bright window. Or, arrange small
pots on waterproof trays for a countertop herb
garden. |
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Choosing your veggies
New varieties of early maturing, compact,
dwarf, or baby types of vegetables make it easier and faster
than ever to improve your chance of success. Miniature edibles
like "Tom Thumb" lettuce, "Tiny Tim" tomatoes,
"Little Finger" carrots and "Golden Midget"
corn are popular choices. Varieties of cabbage, bush squash,
bush cucumbers, eggplant, beets, and snap peas have also been
down sized to fit almost any container.
Standard size vegetables, like salad
greens, beans, peas, peppers, squash and tomatoes also provide
a productive and tasty container crop. Gourmet greens like
arugula, endive, garden cress, and radicchio can be grown
in the same pot with romaine, endive or leaf lettuce.
Perk up your summer stir-fry with compact
summer squash like "EightBall" or "Spacemiser"
zucchini. Plant colorful peppers, ranging from sweet varieties
"California Wonder", "Sun Bell" or "Patio
Bell" to hot peppers like "Thai Dragon" and
"Habanero" for extra zest. Even small eggplants
like "Bambino" and "Ichiban" grow beautifully
in a container, as do "Blue Lake" bush beans and
"Kentucky Blue" pole beans.
No container vegetable garden would
be complete without tomatoes. Cherry tomatoes are easiest
for containers, although some other tomatoes grow well in
pots, including both bush and vine types. The "Sweet
100" cherry tomato is a vigorous grower and popular selection.
Or choose a compact variety like "Patio" or "Celebrity"
if you want to raise fewer but larger tomatoes.
Planting
and Care
When to plant depends on what you're
planting. Some vegetables grow best in cool soil, while others
need warm to hot weather and can't survive a frost. In general
it's best to plant warm weather types in early spring and
cool weather plants in late summer for a fall crop. See "A
Veggie for all Seasons" for a list of warm and cool weather
vegetables.
Before you to plant your veggies in
their new pots, water them thoroughly in their nursery containers.
Remove plants and lightly separate matted roots. Pour moist
potting mix into the container, place the plant so that the
surface of the root ball is within 1 inch of the rim and fill
in with additional potting mix. Press the soil firmly around
each freshly planted veggie with your fingers. The soil will
settle after you water, so be sure to add more soil as needed.
When you're finished planting, water
with a slow, gentle spray. Fill the pot to the top, letting
water sink in until it drips from the drainage holes. The
smaller the container, the more often you'll have to water.
Check your pots daily when the weather is hot or windy and
water lightly whenever the soil surface feels dry.
Most vegetables require about 6 hours
of sunlight a day and regular applications of slow-release
fertilizer to produce a good harvest. Keep weeds pulled because
they steal nutrients and water from your container plants.
Control the pest population by spraying with a natural mixture
of dishwashing liquid, cooking oil and water. Cultivate vegetables
regularly or your plants will stop producing. Harvest your
veggies when they are ripe and at the peak of perfection.
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