How Does Your Garden Grow??????

Frankterpene

Well-Known Member
A couple of them with flowers have bolted. When the tops fall over they're pretty much done growing. My onions didn't do much this year either. I planted some from sets I bought and some from seeds I started. I'm not using sets again as most of the ones I planted from sets bolted. The same thing happened last year so from now on I'm just starting from seed in trays during the winter.
many thanks it will be helpfull for next year... my mother told me to bend them to get them bigger... I just did with garlic too.. garlic seems to answer well.. onions not much
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
I've transplanted a few more tomato and pepper plants at the riverhouse garden. Also the latest round of cukes and spaghetti squash. But I didn't have my camera. The butternut and acorn is just now sprouting.

This is from a few days ago.

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injinji

Well-Known Member
Right now the okra is the star of the garden. The tomatoes were, but they are suffering from too much rain. At the sandhill garden I'm on a strict schedule of okra hoeing. It's one bowl smoked per two rows hoed. But I'm bad to get things backwards.

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BlandMeow

Well-Known Member
nice garlic. I need to read on what to do with it once harvested too. any hints ?:) to preserve it
Harvest carefully to not damage the skin.
Dig it out carefully with a garden fork and pry then up from beneath the bulb. Don't pull out by the stalk. Shake off any dirt that comes away easily, don't wash them or go crazy removing the dirt.

If you have softneck you can braid them to hang, otherwise you can lay flat in a single layer on wire racks. Keep them out of the sun and air moving around them. I've read they cure better when the space gets hot (90+) but still has good air movement. * Edit* Cure for 3 weeks. Then clean up and store them

I'm sticking them in the shed on that rack with the cover removed and fans blowing.
 
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Frankterpene

Well-Known Member
Harvest carefully to not damage the skin.
Dig it out carefully with a garden fork and pry then up from beneath the bulb. Don't pull out by the stalk. Shake off any dirt that comes away easily, don't wash them or go crazy removing the dirt.

If you have softneck you can braid them to hang, otherwise you can lay flat in a single layer on wire racks. Keep them out of the sun and air moving around them. I've read they cure better when the space gets hot (90+) but still has good air movement.

I'm sticking them in the shed on that rack with the cover removed and fans blowing.
YOU CURE THEM HOW MANY TIME?.. oops sorry for caps and thanks for the advices
 

green_machine_two9er

Well-Known Member
Tomatoes coming along nicely. Planted different varieties all together and there is some awesome looking fruits! Just for fun!
 

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Frankterpene

Well-Known Member
here an update of what going well or whats going not that well
Overall beds of cherry or grape like tomatoes getting well:
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some cherry roma tomatoes
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san marzano ripening
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beefsteak getting numbers
 

Frankterpene

Well-Known Member
here beefsteak:
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here are sungold.. with around 12 grapes like that getting there
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sweet banana peppers and aji rico
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cucumbers getting there after I restart cuz of cold nights back in june.. did harvest 10 big marketmore cucumber
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dauther's sunflower
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zucchini, califlower and brocoli were really sad.. so I will not have success with them this year.. ill try next year.. I did harvest some goldrush zucchini and they still growing, but others squash are a fail...
 
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