Vegetables in the Gainesville Garden

Similar documents
Vegetable Gardening. Pam Brown, Gardening Coach pamperedgardeners.com

Vegetable Gardening. Courtney Keck, M.S. Horticulture Horticulture/4-H Educator Canadian County OSU Extension

Building a Raised Bed Vegetable Garden: The Easy Way For South Florida Gardens & Schools

SEED SOWING INSTRUCTIONS

SEASONAL PLANTING STRATEGY AT A GLANCE

Best Vegetable Garden Ever. C Compost will improve your soil C Calendar to plan your garden C Consistency in your care

Growing Vegetables In Containers

Some Like it Hot. Pam Brown, Gardening Coach

Organic Gardening. Plano Community Gardeners Share Their Experience

COMPANION PLANTING FOR EDIBLES

GARDEN MANUAL. Agro-Bio Diversity. October 2015 / Issue 01

Vegetable Gardening 101

Growing Vegetables Part II. To Direct Seed or to Transplant? Why Use Transplants? 1/18/2012

school garden planting guides

Two Key Principles. Backyard Vegetables. Five Factors to Consider in Selecting a Garden Site. Drip Irrigation

Growing Tomatoes in the Home Garden

Adds nutrients to the soil; roots give nitrogen. Attracts parasitic wasps;

Vegetables Chapter 10 OSUE MGV Training. Pam Bennett OSUE State MGV Coordinator Horticulture Educator

By Michael Rose Mayes County OSU Extension Educator

gardening and [ADVANCED ACTIVITY PAGE] W145 Healthy Lifestyle Choices A S Tomatoes Repels flies, hornworms and mosquitos C E S Carrots

Charlotte Glen Horticulture Agent, Pender County Cooperative Extension

HOW TO MAKE A FLAX TEEPEE

Totally Tomatoes, Perfect Peppers

SOUTHERN CONTAINER GARDENING. You can create a garden in any space!

Planning Your Vegetable Garden

Growing Veggies in Northern Colorado

Earth-Kind Vegetables and Herbs. Tim Hartmann Program Specialist Texas A&M AgriLife Extension

Starting Transplants & Sowing Seeds. George Bushell

IN OUR COASTAL CLIMATE

Horticulture. Flower Gardening

Some Things to Start Off With

Master Gardener Vegetable Specialist Training. Prepared by: Thomas LeRoy

CLASS NOTES ON WATERING YOUR VEGETABLE GARDEN

YOUR FARM. AT WORK. CORPORATE WELLNESS PROGRAMS

Gardening Basics. If you are lucky to have a big, sunny space for planting, you may only need to add good soil on top of what you already have.

Planning Your School Garden Program

BASIC ORGANIC GARDENING Specific Harvests: Cool and Warm Season Crops; Cole; Vine; and Perennial Crops with Introduction to Berries

EPUB // HOW TO GROW TOMATO AT HOME

Container Gardening for Small Spaces

VEGETABLE GARDENING. Debby Newman, Harvey Buchite, Terry Ferris and Bob Velander

Session 4: Maintaining Your Garden

Unit D: Fruit and Vegetable Crop Production. Lesson 1: Planning and Preparing a Vegetable Garden Site

Extending the Season

What to Grow and When

SMALL IS BEAUTIFUL. E. F. Schumacher, economist

Recommended Resources: The following resources may be useful in teaching this

Damping-Off/Seedling Blights. Diseases of Vegetables. Diseases of Vegetables. Get Ready...Get Set...Garden 2014

HOME-GROWN ORGANIC TOMATOES

ANNUAL SEMINOLE GARDEN PROJECT.

Growing Great Tomatoes

Page1. Title: Planning a Garden Using a Grid Grades: 3 Subject: Science, Math Time: 45 minutes

COMMUNITY LUNCH & LEARN. Workshop Notes. Container Gardening

Starting by Seed. Shelves and Lights. Choosing the Seeds. Ta-da! Tomato Myth #1 You can t grow tomatoes here! Growing Tomatoes is Fun!

SUCCESS WITH TOMATOES

Ordering from Seed Catalogs: So many seeds So little yard.

A Beginner s Guide to Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky Plans and Preparations

Georgia Home Grown Tomatoes

Gardening Beyond the Frost

Introduce edible flint and the reason this guide was created

Growing Transplants. ID-128 Home Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky (pages 8-10)

APPLE HOUSE FLOWER SALE

Transplants Part 2. Acorn Conference Fall 2011

Pest Management in Vegetable Gardens. Pam Brown Extension Agent Emeritus, Gardening Coach Pampered Gardeners, LLC

Children s Vegetable Garden Program - Fall 2014 Session September 13, 2014

Handouts: MontGuide Can I Grow That Here? MontGuide Planting a Successful Home Vegetable Garden MontGuide Hotbeds and Cold Frames for

Home Grown Peppers: Beginners Guide To Growing Peppers & Chili (Simple Home Gardening) By Tom Ford

UCCE Master Gardeners of El Dorado County Presents

Vegetable Gardening Sheriden Hansen Horticulture Assistant Professor Davis County Extension Utah State University

SOIL TESTING RESOURCES MSU

HOME GROWN FACTS 121 Second Street, Oriskany, NY (315) or (315) FAX: (315)

Vegetable Gardening When Mother Nature Doesn t Cooperate

Sustainable Food Gardening

2/20/2019. Scaling for all Product A - Great, Green w/no color A+ - In full Bloom A B & B - Color and Buds A Bud - Only Buds no Color 1-GALLON

Okra Production in ER IDEA-NEW

Container Gardening Basics

Growing Peppers in New Mexico Gardens

Virginia Cooperative Extension- York County

Container Vegetable Gardening

Growing With Your Food: Planting an Edible Garden

Children s Vegetable Garden Program - Fall 2014 Session September 20, 2014

Starting Seeds for Maplewood Vegetable Gardens

Season Extension for Market Gardeners Oklahoma Women in Ag and Small Business Conference August 2015

Site Requirements. 8 hours full sun. Close to water. Deep, well drained and uncontaminated soil

Session 3: Raised Beds and Container Gardens

Hands On Planting the Fall Vegetable Garden


Outline. Growing Vegetables in a Raised Bed. Advantages of Raised Beds. Types of Raised Beds. Gardening Class Series -- Marshfield, MO 4/23/2018

Why a Vegetable Garden

Eggplant Production IDEA-NEW

Part Round House Productions 1 Inc. All Rights Reserved.

THE SOLANACEAE LESSON SIX Growing the Solanaceae

Getting Started with Your Vegetable Garden

Preparation of a Vegetable Nursery and Transplanting

Diseases of Vegetables

DIVISION 773 VEGETABLES, HERBS, FRUITS and EDUCATIONAL EXHIBITS

FORESTRY RESOURCES DECEMBER 2016

How to Grow. Turnips

Vegetable Gardening In Containers

The Tomato/Pepper/Eggplant Garden Workshop Outline Introductions: Resources: Soil Considerations:

Sustainable, Organic Vegetable Gardening. Presented by: Kent Phillips

Transcription:

Vegetables in the Gainesville Garden W E N D Y W I L B E R U F / I F A S M A S T E R G A R D E N E R C O O R D I N A T O R W I L B E W L @ U F L. E D U 3 2 5 2 7 3 4 5 2 1

A Great Resource... Author: Jim Stephens University Press of Florida www.upf.com ~$17.00

There s an app UF/IFAS: http://m.ifas.ufl.edu Android: https://play.go ogle.com/store/apps/deta ils?id=edu.ufl.ifas.plantin g ios: https://itunes.apple.com/ us/app/floridafresh/id1061646911?ls=1& mt=8

Introduction 1 million gardens in Florida Spring most popular Summer least popular Fall/ winter great time Average size: 300-600 sq ft Retail value: $ 1.00 per sq ft Major problems: infertile soils, pests, and disorders related to weather

Why Do You Garden? Homegrown flavor Save $ Hobby, Pleasure Getting outside, Exercise Organic-control over what you eat Self sufficiency Pride, Satisfaction

Containers Pots Buckets Earth boxes Plastic bags Barrels and drums Container Gardening

Earth box

Grow Boxes/Raised Beds Construction 4- feet wide 4-8 feet long 6-12 inch high 24 inches high for wheelchairs Materials variable Lumber: no pressure treated; use cedar or cypress or plastic *

Site Selection Near house & water source Full sun (> 5-6 hours/day) Away from competing tree roots Well-drained soils Get a soil test? *

Garden Planning Considerations Which vegetables do you like? What will you do with surplus? Do you have the right tools? Labor? Money?

Garden Design Start with Florida Vegetable Gardening Guide Draw a plan on paper Maximize space

Warm Season Vegetables Bush beans (Mar.-Apr.) (Aug.-Sept.) Pole beans (Mar.-Apr.) (Aug.-Sept.) Corn (Mar.-Apr.) Aug Cucumber (Feb.-Apr.) (Aug.-Sept.) Eggplant (Feb.-July) Okra (Mar.- July) Peppers (sweet & hot) (Feb.-Apr.) (July-Aug.) Squash (Mar.-Apr.) (Aug.-Sept.) Tomatoes (Feb.-Apr.) (August) Pumpkins (Mar.-Apr.) (Aug.) Watermelon (Mar.-Apr.) (July-Aug.) Cantaloupe (Mar.-Apr.) Sweet potato (Mar.-June)

Garden Design Garden Planning Crop Arrangement Group by family (for crop rotation) By planting/maturation dates By plant size (tall, medium, short) Similar spacing (ex: diff beans/same row) Herbs and long season crops together

Bush Beans and Pole Beans Full sun Regular water and fertilizer Watch for caterpillars Quick to germinate Succession planting gives you a long season Be ready to harvest daily Bush: Bush Blue Lake, Contender, Roma II, Provider, Cherokee wax, Pole: McCaslan, Kentucky Wonder, Blue Lake, train to trellis, or fence

Corn Full Sun Heavy feeder Plant in blocks for pollination 3 rows at least Fertilize again Succession planting if possible Harvest in the morning for sweetness Silver queen, How sweet it is, Sweet Ice, Early Sunglow

Cucumber Full Sun Train to trellis or fence Regular water and fertilizer Varieties Sweet Success, Poinsett, Ashley, Straight Eight, MarketMore 76 Pollinator dependent You might have to be the bee

Peppers Full sun Easy Water and fertilizer Sweet banana, Cubanelle, California Wonder, Red Knight, Big Bertha Jalapeno Cherry bomb Ancho, Thai, Anaheim Chile, Habanero, Cayenne, Datil.

Squashes Full sun Regular fertilizer and water Bush plants-need plenty of room Trellising helps with air movement Scout for squash vine borers Summer: Summer crookneck, Early white scallop, patty pan, Zucchini: Cocozelle, Spineless beauty, 8ball, yellow Pollinator dependent You might have to be the bee

Tomatoes Full Sun Regular fertilizer and water Put the cage on early Allow for good air movement between plants Scout for hornworms, leaf foot bugs If in a container the volume needs to be minimum 5 gallons No fruit if sustained temps go over 85F Your large fruit crop should be done by July

Tomatoes Large fruit Celebrity, Heat Wave II, Better Boy, Beefmaster, BHN444- Southern Star*, Amelia*, BHN 640* Small fruit Sweet 100 s, Juliet, Red Grape, Sun Gold, Sugar Snack, Sweet Baby Girl Heirloom Green Zebra, Cherokee Purple, Eva Purple Ball, Brandywine, Mortgage Lifter, Delicious * Resistant to Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus

Cherry tomatoes Plant in spring and summer They will still set fruit when temps are about 85 (others won t) Full sun, water and support; use tomato cages Fertilize every 3 weeks Pick often to avoid having split fruit Sweet 100s, Grapes, tiny toms, Sun Gold & BHN 624

Eggplant Heat lover Plant in full sun, average soil Water well; use a mulch Fertilize every 2-3 weeks Harvest when glossy Choose Black Beauty, Calliope, Dancer, Ichiban, (Rosa Bianca was a flop for me)

Sweet potatoes Plant in May and June- we plant slips Full sun (remember crop rotation) In 10 inch x 12 inch tall mounds that you have enriched with fertilizer Water well, but stop watering two weeks before harvest It takes up to 150 days so don t give up Choose Beauregard, Hernandez and Picodito (Boniato)

Okra Plant from March to August In full blazing sun Direct sow seed one inch deep 24 inches apart Water well Harvest pods with clippers often- If you leave old pods on the plant will stop producing Select Alabama Red, Baby Bubba, Clemson, Spineless, Ever tender, Little Lucy

Herbs in the spring Basil Oregano Mints Rosemary Sage Thyme Culantro

Soil Most soils here are very sandy Ideal ph is 6.5 a soil test is a good idea Add compost, manures to increase fertility and water holding ability

Seeds or Transplants Seeds give you a good selection and they are inexpensive Transplants give you an instant garden, they are expensive and your selection can be limited

Water the Garden 1 to 2 inches of water a week Water in the morning Avoid splashing by using drip irrigation

Fertilize the garden Broadcast before planting Side dress with fertilizer every 3 weeks during the growing season

Garden Care Scout for insects Keep an eye out for diseases Protect from invaders Harvest the bulk of the crop and then remove the plant & Wendy says. Do not let the area/container go to weeds in between seasons.

Pests Tomato horn worm Nymphs of Plant bug Leaf footed plant bug Red Imported Fire ant Squirrel

Strategies for making it through Water early in the morning; don t get the leaves wet Weed often Control pests with botanical sprays like Neem or Organocide- Not in the heat of the day Use disease resistant varieties when ever possible Use generous spacing to increase air flow Fertilize regularly Plant lots of pollinator plants to keep the bees and beneficial insects on your side

Don t forget the pollinator plants Heliotrope Gaillardia Mexican Sunflower Dill

Let me know about your success! Wendy Wilber wilbewl@ufl.edu