Growing Peppers
April 24, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment
Peppers
The most popular peppers are the mild bell, banana types, and the pungent Hungarian wax types.
Peppers produce a large yield in a small amount of space, making them suited for even small gardens. Their popularity with gardeners also can be attributed to their unique taste, their visual attractiveness, and their richness in vitamins A and C.
Although there are numerous common or commercial names for peppers, pepper varieties can be classified in two main types: those with mild-or sweet-fleshed fruit, and those with hot-or pungent-fleshed fruit.
Pungency, which is determined by the amount and location of the compound capsaicin, varies from sweet to hot. The “sweet” include Bell, Pimiento, and Sweet Cherry. The “hot” include Anaheim, Cayenne and Jalapeno; and the very hot, Tabasco and Habanero.
Bell peppers, probably the most popular type grown in gardens, are characterized by large, block-shaped fruits with three or four lobes. They are about 3 inches wide, 4 to 6 inches long, and sometimes they taper slightly. They start off as dark green to yellow-green, and most turn red when fully ripe, although some turn yellow, purple, orange, or brown. A few start out white and don’t change color!
Bells normally are harvested in the mature, green stage. They serve a variety of uses including stuffing, relishes, salads, and cooked vegetable dishes.
About 200 varieties are in the Bell group. California Wonder and Yolo Wonder are two of the most dependable in this group. Other dependable varieties are Early Cal Wonder, Bell Boy, Bellringer, Cal Wonder 300, Keystone Resistant Giant, Pip, Canape, Lady Bell, Gypsy, and New Ace Hybrid.
Varieties that are not red at maturity include Golden Bell, Klondike Bell, and Orobelle, which turn from green to yellow. Oriole turns orange. Purple Bell, Lorelei, and Violetta turn purple. The Dove stays white.
Pimiento peppers are sweet with very thick walls. The fruit is conical, 2 to 3 inches wide, 3 to 4 inches long, and slightly pointed. Pimientos are red when ripe, the most commonly used stage. Popular varieties include Perfection Pimiento, and Pimiento L.
Cherry peppers are cherry-or globe-shaped with three cells. They grow on long upright stems, usually above the leaves of the plant. They range from orange to deep red when harvested and may be sweet or hot, large or small.
Varieties include Sweet Cherry, Bird’s Eye, Red Cherry Small, and Red Cherry Large.
Celestial peppers arc cone-shaped and taste very hot. They grow upright above the plant’s leaves. They’re 3/4 inch to 2 inches long, have three cells, and may or may not change color from yellowish to red or purplish to light, orange-red.
Different colored fruit can grow on a plant at the same time, making the plant colorful and attractive. Celestial peppers are ornamental, grow best in containers, and are good patio plants. Popular varieties are Celestial, Floral Gem, and Fresno Chile.
Tabasco peppers are 1 to 3 inches long, slim, tapered, and very hot. They are attractive ornamental plants that provide fruit you can harvest. The most popular pepper of this group is Tabasco, grown commercially for making tabasco sauce. Other hot peppers are Chili Piquin, Coral Gem, Japanese Cluster, Thai Hot, and Small Red Chili.
Ornamental and novelty peppers include the varieties Riot, Marbels, and the orange, lantern-shaped, ultra-hot Habanero.
Climatic requirements
Because peppers are of tropical origin and in the same family as tomatoes and eggplant, they thrive when temperatures are warm. Consequently, delay transplanting until the danger of frost is past. The ideal temperature for growing green peppers is 70 to 80°F during the day and 60 to 70°F at night.
Blossoms may not set fruit if temperatures are below these ranges or if soil is too dry.
Some varieties that experience temperatures below 60°F will not even blossom. Select the variety most suited to your area’s temperature.
Peppers mature slowly. Under good growing conditions, they take at least 45 to 55 days after pollination to produce harvestable fruit. For this reason, several varieties should not be grown where the frost-free season is less than 120 days.
In many areas, temperatures during the day and night are so low that even without frost, maturity may take an additional 15 to 20 days.
Other environmental conditions that cause an extreme loss of water result in the dropping of flower buds, flowers, and small fruit. Even though there may be adequate moisture available in the soil, a dry (low-humidity), warm, or windy day will cause rapid, excessive transpiration that the plant can’t tolerate. Low soil moisture also can cause buds and blossoms to drop.
Soil preparation
Pepper plants grow best in warm, well-drained soils of moderate fertility and good tilth. Seedbed preparation should start when the soil has sufficient moisture to form a mud ball that crumbles into medium-sized fragments.
Cultivation should mix crop residues and organic matter in the top 7 to 8 inches of soil. It should destroy current weed growth and provide a small, granular type of bed for transplanting. Over-cultivated soil becomes powdery and has a tendency to crust. Ideal pH for peppers is 6.0 to 8.0.
Fertilizer
One pound of a pre-plant fertilizer (20-20-20, for example) for each 100 square feet is recommended. One week after blossoming begins, sidedress with 1 1/2 ounces of ammonium sulfate for each 10 feet of row.
Planting transplants
Peppers are best started in home gardens by using transplants after the soil has warmed in the spring. Peppers should start growing quickly after planting and maintain a rapid growth rate.
If peppers start blooming and set fruit while the plants are too small, they will be stunted and fail to develop the plant size necessary for a good yield. Such premature fruit should be removed.
Don’t attempt to grow peppers from seed unless you have a greenhouse or a hotbed with good exposure to sunlight. Pepper seedlings don’t grow satisfactorily under house lights or on windowsills.
Transplant stocky, sturdy plants into a well-prepared soil that has been fertilized before. Normally, a pre-plant fertilizer of 0.2 pound nitrogen for each 100 square feet is recommended. When first fruits set, sidedress with 1 1/2 ounces ammonium sulfate for every 10 feet of row space.
Make the transplant holes 3 to 4 inches deep and about 14 to 18 inches apart in the row. Space the rows 24 to 36 inches apart. Before planting, fill the holes with water and let it soak in.
Move the plants carefully from the box or flat and set them in the transplant holes. Leave as much soil as possible around the roots. Fill the hole with soil and pack loosely around the plant.
Don’t cover the roots deeper than the original soil ball. Leave a slightly sunken area around each plant to hold water. Water the plants after planting.
Try to transplant peppers in the evening or on a cloudy day. This will keep the plants from wilting and getting too dry. You can use a board or shingle to protect transplants from excessive wind and sun.
While use of peppers varies from family to family, about three to four hot pepper plants and eight to ten sweet pepper plants usually are enough for a family of four.
Plastic mulches and row covers
Peppers respond well to plastic mulch and row covers. Plastic mulch should be black or the new photo-selective plastic that maximizes soil warming yet controls weeds. Row covers, if used, should be removed when temperatures inside the cover exceed 90°F for 2 or 3 consecutive days at mid afternoon.
Cultivation and watering
If cultivation is necessary to remove other plant competition, it should be shallow. Deep cultivation close to the plants will destroy much of the root system and reduce yield and quality.
After the plants are well established, applied mulches can conserve soil moisture, prevent soil compaction, and help suppress weed growth.
Harvesting and drying
You can harvest at any time. Peppers generally are harvested by breaking them from the plant, leaving the stem attached to the fruits. Be careful not to break entire branches from the plant.
Some gardeners prefer to cut off the fruits to prevent damage to the plant. If peppers are picked as they mature, yields will be greater.
The first peppers should be ready 8 to 10 weeks after transplanting. The Bell varieties, however, usually are picked when they are full-grown and mature–3 to 4 inches long, firm, and the desired color.When the fruits are mature, they will break easily from the plant. The fruits may be left on the plant to ripen fully to a red or yellow color. Hot peppers, except Jalapeno (which remains green when ripe), are usually harvested at the red ripe stage.
Two methods are used to dry hot peppers.
The traditional method is to pick fruits when mature, tie the stems together, and hang them in a dry area such as a garage. Avoid direct sunlight, and check the fruit daily to be sure no rot is developing. If a fruit rots, pull it from the bunch and discard it.
A simpler method consists of pulling up the entire plant and hanging it upside down in a dark, dry area for 3 to 4 weeks. Leaves will keep the fruits apart, so there is no need to check for rot. When fruits are dry, pull off and store.
In general, fresh peppers have a short storage life (1 to 2 weeks). Cool, moist conditions (45 to 50°F and 85 to 90% relative humidity make for ideal storage. Freeze peppers whole or in slices. Peppers frozen without blanching are best in uncooked foods. Blanched peppers are easier to pack and are best in cooked foods.
Store hot peppers after drying in an airtight container out of the heat and direct sunlight. They will keep their hot flavor for several years if stored properly.
When you use dried hot peppers, place in a pestle and grind. For extra hot powder, grind the seeds, too. If you want mildly hot powder, remove the seeds. Be careful not to touch your eyes, lips, or mucus membranes without washing your hands after handling hot peppers.
If you have never used hot peppers in cooking, start off with small amounts and work up to hotter foods. Adding half a pepper to a dish for four people will make it hot enough for beginners. Dishes for four with one-and-a-half peppers are really hot!
Growing Potatoes
April 23, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment
Potatoes
Potatoes are an excellent choice for the home garden. They emerge quickly and grow rapidly. Potatoes yield well under most soil and growing conditions and can be stored for long periods without canning, drying, or freezing.
Few gardening activities are as rewarding as unearthing a hill of tender, new potatoes for dinner. They can be mouth-watering when prepared by any method, alone or in combination with other foods.
Potatoes are not only delicious but also highly nutritious. They are rich in starch, but an average-sized baked potato contains only 90 to 100 calories-slightly more than an apple and equivalent to one-half cup of cottage cheese. Potato protein has a well-balanced complement of amino acids and is among the best to be found in vegetables. Tubers are a good source of trace minerals and several vitamins, including vitamin C.
While potatoes perform well in most situations when properly cared for, they are susceptible to a number of pests and disorders. Good yields and quality can be achieved in most situations by following the suggestions given here.
Selecting a variety
Selecting the proper variety, or cultivar, is important since varieties differ in yield, cooking characteristics, time of maturity, skin and flesh color, and storage life. Varieties traditionally have been classed as white, red, or russet, based on skin color and texture. Increased interest in new gourmet varieties has added purple, blue, orange, yellow, and other colors to the inventory.Tubers of standard white and red varieties generally are round to oblong and relatively thin skinned compared to russets. Russet tubers tend to be oblong and relatively dark colored and thick-skinned at maturity. Because of their thick skins, russet varieties are less susceptible to injury during harvest than reds or whites. The thick russet skins generally also are resistant to common scab.
Gourmet varieties are available in many color combinations and tuber shapes. Home gardeners can enjoy varieties not available in grocery stores. Such varieties are grown more for special features such as color and taste than for high yield and good storage.
Consider the time span from planting to maturity when selecting a variety. Norland, for example, may mature in 80 to 90 days, compared with 120 days or more for Russet Burbank. Early-maturing varieties are a better choice for “new” potatoes, but late-maturing varieties store better because they resist sprouting and shriveling in storage.
Select a variety suited to the method of cooking you prefer.
While the leading United States variety, Russet Burbank, is excellent for frying and baking, it often is inferior to Kennebec or Red Pontiac for boiling. Some also consider baked Russet Burbank tubers too dry. Many home gardeners prefer to grow an all-purpose variety such as Kennebec, while others grow several varieties for specific uses.
The following varieties are satisfactory for home gardens. You may want to try more than one.
Early-maturing varieties
Norland, Dark Red Norland — Redskinned with white flesh. Produces low to medium yields of average-sized tubers. Tuber shape and appearance usually are excellent. The earliest variety currently grown in Oregon. Good for boiling and frying, fair for baking. Somewhat resistant to common scab but less so than russet-skinned varieties. Dark Red Norland, a selection from the original variety, produces darker, more colorful skins than the standard Norland, which is declining in popularity.
Norgold Russet — Yields slightly more than Norland but also matures slightly later. Susceptible to blackleg and hollow-heart of tubers. Once the leading earlymaturing variety in Oregon, Norgold has been replaced by Russet Norkotah at the commercial level. Fair to good for baking, french frying, and boiling. Seed may be in short supply and unavailable at most garden centers.
Russet Norkotah — An outstanding early russet. Oblong tubers are extremely attractive with excellent medium russet skins. Tuber physiological disorders such as knobs and hollow centers are very rare even under extremely dry conditions. Susceptible to early dying caused by verticillium wilt but highly resistant to common scab. Fair to good for baking, frying, and boiling.
White Rose — White. Tubers generally are long, thin-skinned, and deep-eyed. Good yields. Will not bake well early but satisfactory for most other uses. Flavor and texture generally not as good as Kennebec. Slightly later maturing than Norgold.
Midseason varieties
Kennebec — White. An excellent all-purpose potato. High yields of large tubers. Susceptible to scab and greening when not hilled properly. Boils, bakes, and fries satisfactorily. Excellent for french frying.
Red LaSoda — Yields more than Norland. Tubers have bright red skins but may be slightly rough in shape with deep eyes. Widely grown in home gardens. Satisfactory to good for most home uses. Susceptible to common scab.
Red Pontiac — Midseason to late. Extremely high yields of large, deep-eyed potatoes. Good cooking quality for most uses. A good red storage potato. Generally too late for early “new” potatoes.
Late-maturing varieties
Russet Burbank — Also known as “Netted Gem,” the “Idaho Baker,” and “Russet.” Leading variety in the United States. Medium to high yields of large, long, and often knobby, misshapen tubers. Excellent for baking and french frying, fair for boiling, but tends to lose shape and fall apart because of high starch content. Stores extremely well.
Century Russet — Smooth, large, and oblong tubers. Good for baking, boiling, and microwaving. Moister than Russet Burbank when baked because of lower starch content. Satisfactory for frying. Resistant to several diseases. Extremely high yields of attractive tubers.
Ranger Russet — Tubers similar to those of Russet Burbank but sometimes longer, less susceptible to knobs. Good for all table uses; better internal quality than Russet Burbank. Does not store as well as Russet Burbank.
Gourmet and specialty varieties
Many varieties of potatoes are grown for special features including skin and flesh color or unusual flavor. Such “gourmet” varieties often produce low yields compared with standard varieties and may not store as well.
Purple-skinned varieties — All Blue, also called “Purple Marker,” and Blue Cristie are more commonly available to home gardeners than most others in this category. All Blue produces smooth, oblong, late-maturing tubers with dark purple skin and flesh. Blue Cristie tubers are purple skinned with some redto-pink stripes, prominent eyes, and white flesh. The variety Brigus produces smooth, round, purple-skinned tubers with light yellow flesh.
Yellow skins and flesh — Popular varieties in this category include Yukon Gold, Yellow Finn, and Bintje. Yukon Gold tends to produce smoother tubers and matures earlier than the other two. Yellow Finn stores well.
Red skin, yellow flesh — Desiree is probably the best known and most readily available variety in this group. Others include Saginaw Gold and Iditared.
Soil and fertility requirements
Potatoes do best on fertile, well-drained loamy or sandy soils but can be grown on virtually any soil if high yields and smooth appearance are not essential. Soils with a high pH (alkaline) or extremely high organic matter cause severe scab problems in susceptible varieties, including most round whites and reds.
Tillage
Work the soil to a depth of 6 to 8 inches before planting. The seedbed does not have to be perfectly smooth as is required for small-seeded crops. Excessive tillage actually can cause the soil to seal over after heavy rains, leading to seed piece suffocation and death.
Fertilizer
Potato plants require 16 or 17 mineral elements (nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, calcium, magnesium, potassium, iron, manganese, molybdenum, copper, boron, zinc, chlorine, sodium, cobalt, vanadium, and silicon) for maximum yields and quality. However, most are needed only in trace amounts and are provided in sufficient quantities by most soils.
Most commercial fertilizers contain only three major elements- nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium-and sometimes a fourth, sulfur. By law, the fertilizer analysis must be displayed on the container.
Fertilizers typically are identified by three prominent numbers separated by hyphens (10-20-20, 12-12-12, etc.). The first number always refers to nitrogen, the second to phosphorus, and the third to potassium. If a fourth number is present, it typically refers to sulfur.
The fertilizer analysis means the following:
* Nitrogen (N) content always is expressed as the percentage of actual nitrogen.
* Phosphorus (P) content is expressed as the percentage of P2O5. Multiply the number shown on the package by 0.44 to determine the actual P content.
* Potassium (K) is expressed as the percentage of K2O. Multiply the number shown on the package by 0.83 to get the actual K content.Thus 10-12-12 fertilizer contains the following:
10 percent nitrogen;
5.28 percent phosphorus (12 percent P2O5 x 0.44 = 5.28 percent P);
9.96 percent potassium (12 percent K2O x 0.83 = 9.96K).
Fertilizers normally are applied at or shortly before planting either by broadcast or band applications or a combination of the two. Many gardeners hand broadcast the entire amount and work it into the top 3 or 4 inches of soil by rototilling or raking.
A more effective but time-consuming method is to place all or part of the fertilizer in a band 3 inches to the side and 1 inch below the seed pieces. A combination of broadcasting half and banding half of the fertilizer usually is more effective than either method alone.
Never place fertilizer on or directly above the seed pieces; the fertilizer salt will dehydrate and damage or kill the seed pieces and developing roots and shoots.
When the potato plants are about 6 inches tall, some gardeners band or “side-dress” additional fertilizer beside the rows. As a general rule, do not side-dress more than about half the amount that was used at planting. Side-dressed fertilizers always should be covered with soil or watered in shortly after application to prevent excessive loss of nitrogen to the air as ammonia.
Never use “weed and feed” fertilizers on vegetables. They contain herbicides that will kill many crop plants.
Fertilizer requirements for potatoes differ among Oregon geographical regions. Central and eastern Oregon soils, for example, normally require less phosphorus than western Oregon soils but may require more sulfur.
Fertilizer and lime rates should be based on soil tests for best results. A soil test is indispensable for precisely determining lime and fertilizer needs. Soil tests are highly recommended for the first cropping season and at least every second or third year thereafter. Information on soil testing is available from county Extension offices.
While not ideal for every situation, the following fertilizer recommendations are satisfactory for most Oregon home gardens.
Complete 1:1:1 (approximately equal percentages of N, P2O5, and K2O) or 1:2:2 fertilizers generally are preferred unless soil test reports suggest otherwise. Materials such as 10-10-10, 15-15-15, and 10-20-20 satisfy these requirements. They are widely available from most fertilizer dealers and gardening centers.
Apply 10-10-10 at the rate of about 7 pounds per 100 feet of row or 23 pounds per 1,000 square feet. Higher or lower analysis fertilizers should be applied at adjusted rates to supply about the same level of nitrogen.
For example, 15-15-15 applied at the rates of about 4.5 pounds per 100 feet of row or 15 pounds per 1,000 square feet would supply approximately the same level of nutrients as 10-10-10 applied at the higher rates. Any complete fertilizer similar to the above, applied at appropriate rates, will perform satisfactorily (Table 1).
The three numbers on fertilizer packages represent nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium.
Nitrogen usually requires more management than phosphorus and potassium because it is easily leached below the rooting zone by overwatering or heavy rains. Do not apply more water than the soil can hold in the top 15 inches. Prolonged heavy rains prior to late July may call for additional nitrogen applications.
Some western and north central Oregon soils are low in sulfur and may require up to 1 pound per 1,000 square feet each year. Magnesium also may be low in some instances. Soil tests are particularly useful in detecting shortages of these elements. Recommended materials and rates will be recorded on the soil test report.
Table 1.-Fertilizer application rates.
Fertilizer per 100-ft row per 1,000 sq ft
10-10-10 7 lb 23 lb
15-15-15 4.5 lb 15 lb
20-20-20 3.5 lb 12 lb
Soil amendments
Soil amendments, cover crops, manures, and composted organic materials are excellent for increasing organic matter and long-term fertility of the soil. Such materials also tend to improve soil structure.
However, high levels of undecayed organic matter can promote scab on most white-and red-skinned potato varieties. Therefore, the use of uncomposted manure except in the fall is discouraged. If you wish to use sludge or recycled organic matter in or around your garden, you should know the nutrient (NPK, etc.) content of the material. You also should know possible health risks.
Manures tend to be overrated as fertilizer materials but highly underrated as soil builders. A ton of fresh cow manure, for example, contains only about 11 pounds of nitrogen, 3 pounds of phosphoric acid, and 10 pounds of potash. Concentrations of N, P, and K in dried manures may be three to four times higher than in fresh manures.
Poultry and sheep manures tend to be about twice as high in nitrogen and many times higher in phosphoric acid than cattle manures. Potash levels are about the same for all species. Unless fresh manures are applied in excess of about 5 tons per acre, recommended fertilizer levels should not be altered.
A good legume cover crop plowed under just before planting can reduce fertilizer needs by up to 20 percent. Remember, though, that undecomposed organic matter such as fresh manure or cover crop debris can cause severe scab infection in susceptible varieties.
While scab does not affect eating quality or storability, the unsightly skin lesions definitely detract from tuber appearance and may severely reduce market value. If scab is a problem, use resistant russet-skinned varieties.
Heavy liming is not recommended for potatoes in most cases since it increases the soil pH, which causes scabby tubers in most round white and red varieties. The pH should be held between 5.2 and 5.8, slightly acid, if scab has been a problem. Otherwise it should be around 6.5, since other vegetables do best at pH 6.5 to 6.8. Russet-skinned potato varieties, especially Russet Burbank, are highly resistant to the scab organism.
Cutting and handling seed
Whenever possible, plant only certified seed potatoes. Such seed has been inspected by professionals and judged to be relatively free of diseases and other problems such as sprout-inhibiting chemicals. Healthy seed tubers produce healthy plants and good yields. Most garden centers stock certified seed of several common varieties, but certified seed may not be readily available for minor varieties except through mail-order companies.
Obviously, non-certified seed will be less productive than certified stock and generally will call for increased disease and insect control during the season. Avoid using home-grown potatoes for planting, since they probably are heavily infected with viruses that can drastically reduce yield and quality of the new crop. Most supermarket potatoes are useless for seed because they have been treated with chemicals that permanently inhibit sprouting.
The use of non-certified seed may be essential in some instances. If non-certified seed must be used, especially seed from grocery stores and other questionable sources, determine whether the tubers will sprout by holding them at room temperature in a dark, humid, well-ventilated area for up to 2 weeks before planting. If sprouts begin to elongate vigorously, the tubers probably will produce plants in the garden.
Cut large seed tubers into several pieces. The ideal seed piece is blocky in shape, has as few cut surfaces as possible, weighs between 1 and 2 ounces (slightly larger than a golf ball), and has two or more “eyes” or buds. When cut properly, 10 pounds of seed potatoes will produce about 100 seed pieces, enough to plant about 100 feet of row. A 100-foot row should yield between 200 and 400 pounds of usable potatoes if the crop is allowed to mature fully.
The term “eye” originated from the fact that the potato tuber is a modified underground stem and contains rudimentary leaf scars below each bud. These scars tend to be crescent shaped, reminiscent of human eyebrows; hence the associated buds came to be called eyes.
Plant in warm (above 45oF moist soil immediately after cutting if possible. If planting must be delayed because of cold or wet soil, hold seed pieces at room temperature for 4 or 5 days to promote healing of cut surfaces. During this healing period, the seed pieces should be held at high humidity with adequate ventilation.
A closed, but not sealed, cardboard box with a few ventilation holes provides good conditions for healing. Do not pile cut seed pieces more than about 6 inches deep. Never store seed pieces or tubers in airtight containers. Some sprout growth is normal and desirable for rapid emergence through the soil, but sprouts should not be so long that they break off during planting.
When planting early or under questionable conditions, consider treating seed pieces with a recommended fungicide to reduce decay. A popular method with home gardeners is to place freshly cut seed pieces and a small amount of fungicide dust in a closed plastic bag and shake it vigorously.
Treatment should be done outside or in a well-ventilated area since fungicide dusts can irritate the skin, nose, and throat. Be sure to use rubber gloves, a dust mask, and eye protection. Always read and carefully follow label directions when using any agrichemical.
Planting
Potatoes can be planted from March until mid-June, but most gardeners prefer May. Due to wet weather, western Oregon gardeners normally do not plant before late April or early May.
Planting early and using early varieties will allow early harvest but also may cause some missing plants due to seed piece decay. Consider planting a few hills early for “new” boiling potatoes and more later for fall and winter storage. Late-harvest and late-maturing varieties generally store better than early-harvest and early-maturing varieties.
Space rows about 3 feet apart for easy cultivation and hilling. Space seed pieces 10 to 12 inches apart in furrows and cover with about 4 inches of soil. Deeper covering is permissible on dry or sandy soils in eastern Oregon, but be sure not to cover more than about 4 inches deep on heavy clay soils or in wet situations.
Also, be sure that planted rows are slightly mounded in western Oregon to prevent water standing in the rows and drowning the seed pieces and developing plants.
If you prefer larger tubers, consider widening the within-row spacing to 15 inches or so. Conversely, if tubers have been too large, plant the seed pieces closer together. Seed spacings of 6 inches or less are not uncommon. Tuber size also can be controlled through variety selection.
Cultivation and hilling
Weed control is essential for best yields and quality. The most practical method of controlling weeds in the home garden is by mechanical means-rototilling or hoeing. No chemical herbicide is labeled for all crops normally grown in the home garden. Mechanical cultivation also breaks up soil crusts and increases oxygen availability to the roots. To reduce clods, avoid cultivating when the soil is wet. Late-season cultivation should be shallow and well away from the rows to avoid damaging potato roots and tubers.
Potato tubers turn green in sunlight. The green color is chlorophyll and is not poisonous. However, solanine, a poisonous alkaloid, increases along with chlorophyll. Green potatoes therefore could be toxic if eaten in quantities far beyond normal consumption. Many other food crops also contain alkaloids or other toxins that also could be harmful with excessive consumption.
To prevent greening, keep the tubers covered by periodically “hilling” up or mounding soil around the base of the plants. Avoid covering the leaves. Since hilling also controls small weeds in the row, most gardeners prefer to form hills gradually by adding a small amount of soil each time the planting is worked.
Stop cultivation and hilling shortly after bloom to avoid root damage. The hills should be about 8 inches high and 10 to 12 inches across by that time.
Watering
Water potatoes in mid-day to allow the foliage to dry before nightfall. Dew and high relative humidity during the night and early morning, especially in western Oregon, may cause the leaves to remain wet and highly susceptible to infection by late blight and other fungal and bacterial diseases.
Potatoes need up to 2 inches of water per week depending on the time of year and weather conditions. Hot, dry conditions and vigorous growth increase water needs. Therefore, moisture requirements are highest during mid-season and generally much lower early and late.
Do not irrigate before plant emergence unless absolutely necessary. Wet soils can aggravate seed piece decay. Begin irrigating shortly after plants emerge and keep the soil damp, but not flooded. Water only when and as much as the crop needs. An even, adequate soil moisture supply favors maximum yields and quality. Reduce irrigation late in the season. Cease watering when the vines begin to die or a week or two before final harvest for winter storage.
Soil texture does not alter crop water needs but does strongly affect the amount of water that can be applied in a single irrigation. Many sandy soils, for example, hold less than 1 inch of available water per foot of soil, while heavier silt loam soils may hold 2 inches or more.
Potato roots normally do not penetrate more than about 18 inches into the soil, and 90 percent or more of the roots usually are restricted to the top foot. Therefore, if the crop requires 2 inches of water in a given week, you often can meet crop needs with a single weekly application of 2 or 3 inches on silt loams. However, you will need two or three 1-inch applications, spaced 2 or 3 days apart, on sands.
When irrigating, try to apply only as much moisture as the soil will hold in the top 15 inches. Higher application rates not only waste water but also leach much of the nitrogen and other nutrients below the root zone–and eventually into streams and rivers, with adverse environmental impacts.
Conversely, avoid frequent, light applications that may wet the soil surface but leave most of the roots dry. When sprinklers are used, monitor application rates by placing open-topped tin cans throughout the planting. Turn off the sprinklers when the proper depth has collected in the cans, or when shoveled holes show good moisture down to at least 12 inches.
The irrigation methods described above generally are satisfactory for all home garden vegetables.
Harvesting and storing
Tubers can be harvested for immediate use as soon as they are large enough. Norland or Russet Norkotah, for example, will produce small immature or “new” potatoes for cooking with peas or beans within 50 days after planting. Don’t miss the opportunity to harvest and enjoy new potatoes at about the time plants are blooming.
Do not attempt to store immature potatoes for more than a few days. Potatoes for storage should not be dug until 2 weeks after vines have died from frost or old age, or have been cut and removed. This allows the tuber skin to toughen and resist cutting and bruising during harvest. Harvest for storage normally does not begin before early October in most areas. Western Oregon gardeners should harvest before the fall rains set in.
To prevent excess mud and soil on the tubers, dig only when the soil is relatively dry. Do not wash potatoes before storage, since wet potatoes decay easily. Never store potatoes with decay or bad cuts.
Potatoes should be stored in a cool, dark, well-ventilated area where there is no danger of freezing. Temperatures around 40oF are best for long-term storage. A root cellar or similar location generally supplies a very satisfactory storage environment for potatoes. Do not use plastic bags or airtight containers, which might cause the tubers to suffocate. Remember, light in storage causes tubers to form chlorophyll and turn green.
Potatoes stored below 40oF may become sweet-tasting as tuber starch is changed to sugars, primarily glucose and sucrose. Sweet tubers produce dark-colored fries and off-flavors. Warming the potatoes to room temperature for several days before use usually cures the problem.
Shriveling and sprouting increase at storage temperatures above 50oF To reduce shriveling, store potatoes in a humid but not wet area. Breaking off sprouts from time to time also reduces water loss and shriveling.
Controlling pests and diseases
Although chemicals used in the home garden are relatively safe to humans, all pesticides are potentially dangerous, especially if misused. Always use them with caution, strictly according to label directions, and only when needed. Apply and store chemicals away from children. Read and precisely follow the instructions printed on the manufacturer’s labels. Do not apply pesticides closer to harvest than recommended by the label.
Many materials recommended by reputable suppliers will effectively control potato insects and diseases. Most insecticides, for example, are multi-purpose, controlling several species.
Since pesticide registrations change frequently, affecting the availability of pesticides and changing permissible practices, this publication does not make specific pesticide recommendations.
For current recommendations, refer to the Pacific Northwest Plant Disease Control Handbook and Insect Control Handbook, published and revised annually by the Extension Services of Oregon State University, Washington State University, and the University of Idaho. In addition, instructions for pesticide use are provided on pesticide container labels and in other literature provided by manufacturers.
Insecticidal soaps are becoming more popular for small plantings. Soaps are relatively safe to work with and effective for most insects if used regularly as recommended. Insects must be contacted directly by the soap solution to be affected.
Disease control
Control of insects such as aphids, wireworms, and flea beetle larvae will reduce disease problems.
Seed-borne diseases — The most serious diseases of potatoes are carried in the seed tubers. Many of these, particularly viruses, can be prevented or reduced by using certified seed.
Do not plant seed potatoes showing any decay. Decaying seed pieces contain fungi and/or bacteria that can rapidly destroy the seed pieces and developing plants. Decaying seed pieces also can introduce harmful diseases such as late blight and bacterial ring rot, which can harm the entire planting. If soil conditions are not suitable for rapid healing and plant emergence (above 45oF, moist but not wet), allow cut seed pieces to heal for several days before planting.
Early and late blight — Both early blight and late blight occur in Oregon. Both diseases cause dark, dead spots on the leaves. Early blight spots often look like a bullseye target when examined closely, and the disease often is referred to as “target spot.” Late blight lesions, by contrast, often show a white, moldy growth around the edges, particularly on the undersides of leaves and in early morning or during wet weather.
While early blight primarily is a leaf problem, late blight can cause severe tuber decay in storage. Late blight was responsible for the Irish famine of the mid-1840s, in which more than a million people perished. Do not store late blight-infected tubers and never use them for seed.
Since late blight prefers cool, humid situations, it normally is most severe in western Oregon, especially in the Willamette Valley in wet, cool weather in late August and September.
Both early and late blight can be controlled by weekly spraying or dusting with any of several recommended fungicides. Follow label instructions for best results.
Some materials should not be applied within 14 days of harvest. Additional spray information is available at county Extension offices and garden centers.
Soil-borne diseases — Avoid growing potatoes in the same section of the garden year after year, since this causes a buildup of soil-borne diseases including verticillium wilt and scab. Tomatoes, strawberries, and eggplant also are susceptible to wilt and should not precede or follow potatoes in the cropping sequence.
Leaves of verticillium-infected plants wilt from the bottom of the plant upward beginning about flowering time. The wilted foliage turns yellow and then brown, and severely infected plants quickly die.
Common potato scab first is expressed as minute reddish-brown spots around breathing pores (lenticels) in small tubers. The lesions become larger and darker to form circular scabbed areas that may be isolated or coalesced to form large corky masses. While scab does not affect food quality, severely affected tubers are unmarketable. Most russet varieties are resistant to scab.
Viruses — Viruses can be controlled by using certified seed, which is relatively free of viruses, and by controlling aphids. Aphids, particularly the green peach aphid, spread several viruses (e.g., potato virus Y, potato leafroll virus) from plant to plant during feeding.
A single feeding on a potato leafroll-infected plant can cause the green peach aphid to be a carrier for the rest of its life and to be able to infect every plant it feeds on. Therefore, good aphid control is essential for controlling many potato viruses. Some viruses (for example, PVX and potato spindle tuber viroid) are sap transmitted and can be spread from plant to plant by clothing or equipment.
Unlike fungal and bacterial diseases, which usually cause obvious lesions and decay, external symptoms of viruses usually are limited to plant stunting and distortion and yield and quality loss. Potato leafroll virus (PLRV), for example, causes the leaves to roll up and the plants to become stunted and sometimes yellow. Mosaic viruses such as potato virus Y (PVY) and potato virus X (PVX) cause characteristic light and dark patterns in leaves. Certain combinations of mosaic viruses (PVX plus PVY) cause the plants to become extremely distorted, lose leaves, and sometimes eventually die.
Because viruses are spread easily throughout the patch, you should remove and discard suspect plants as early as possible.
Insect control
Insects other than the common ones listed below may attack potatoes. Ask your county Extension agent or other expert for additional information on insects and their control.
Many insecticides are extremely toxic to honeybees. Try to spray early or late in the day when bees are less active.
The discerning gardener will notice that one or two insecticides used as needed will control most of the insects listed.
Insecticidal soaps are effective against most insects when used properly. Some gardeners also have used household soaps successfully for insect control. Results have been mixed, however. Soap solutions must come into direct contact with insects in order to be effective.
Some soaps can cause plant injury when used in high concentrations and/or left on the leaves too long. Because soaps are effective only when in solution, dry residues can be washed off to reduce plant injury if necessary. Mesh row covers also can prevent insect injury but they are expensive and inconvenient to use, especially during hilling and cultivating.
Flea beetles — Two species of flea beetles, the potato flea beetle and the tuber flea beetle, attack potatoes in Oregon. Adult flea beetles are shiny, dark beetles about 1/16 inch long. They rest on tops of leaves and jump like a flea when disturbed. Damage caused by the adults is minor, consisting of small round holes slightly larger than a pencil lead in the leaves.
Considerable damage can be caused by larvae of the tuber flea beetle feeding on tubers. Injured tubers show pimple-like swellings on the skin and brown feeding tunnels about 1/32 inch in diameter up to 1/2 inch deep in the flesh. Larvae can be controlled best by killing adults with recommended sprays before they can lay eggs at the base of the plants.
Flea beetles can be controlled by spraying or dusting with various insecticides. Begin treatment when two-thirds of the plants have emerged and continue through the season whenever new leaf damage is observed. Be aware that insecticides that control flea beetles but do not kill aphids actually can increase aphid populations by destroying beneficial insects such as lady beetles, which feed on aphids.
Aphids — Aphids are small, soft-bodied insects about 1/16 inch long. They come in many colors and may or may not have wings. Aphids feed much like mosquitoes, by inserting stylets into the plant and sucking sap. They usually feed and cluster on the undersides of leaves and shoot tips. Vines may become covered with thick, sticky “honey dew” excreted by the aphids. Aphids damage plants by spreading viruses and, when present in large numbers, directly weakening or killing plants through sap removal.
Many insecticides control aphids. More than one application during the season is necessary. Insecticidal soaps also control aphids when used regularly.
Wireworms — Wireworms are slick, brownish, slender, hard-bodied worms up to 11/2 inches long. They live in the soil. The body is segmented, with three pairs of legs situated near the front. Wireworms bore into seed pieces in the spring and later tunnel into tubers or eat out deep, funnel-shaped holes. Decay organisms (fungi and bacteria) often enter the wounds. Wireworms can be severe in some gardens and almost nonexistent in others.
Labeled granular insecticides incorporated into the soil according to label directions generally will control wireworms and other insects such as symphylans. Rotating crops or moving the whole garden can be helpful in controlling soil insects.
Colorado potato beetles — This beetle sometimes is troublesome in central and eastern Oregon but not in the Willamette Valley or Klamath Basin. The adults are about 1/2 inch long, whitish yellow with black stripes, and hard bodied. The soft-bodied larvae usually are copper colored. Both adults and larvae chew on leaves.
Potato beetles can be controlled with various insecticides as directed on the labels. Hand picking the adult beetles and egg masses from the plants is effective but not very practical in large gardens. Insecticidal soaps or mesh row covers probably would work fairly well.A regular spray program for flea beetles and Colorado potato beetles usually will reduce the incidence of spotted cucumber beetles, which can be troublesome in some areas.
Blister beetles — These are black, shiny beetles about 1/2 inch long. They feed on leaves but only occasionally are a serious problem.
Do not crush them–their body fluids can cause blisters.
Mites — Mites are tiny spider-like creatures that are difficult to see but detectable by their feeding, which causes the plants to yellow and die. Fine webbing may be evident.
Mites can be controlled with labeled pesticides; however, they may be resistant in some areas. Spraying plants with water and using sprinkler irrigation are somewhat effective in washing mites off plants. Good miticides are available should mites become a problem.
Alvin Mosley
Growing Corn
April 14, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment
Corn
Sweet corn is a warm-season vegetable that can be grown easily in most gardens.
Successive plantings will yield continuous harvests. Like most vegetables, corn will grow best
with plenty of sunlight. More than any other vegetable, the good taste of corn depends on
harvesting the ears at the right time and cooking them quickly. Taste is the best reason for
homegrown sweet corn.
In addition to its fine flavor, 1 pound of sweet corn will yield 55 grams of carbohydrates, 9
grams of protein, 2 grams of fat, and 240 calories of food energy. Kernel texture, shape, and
flavor are governed by starch and sugar content, and this differs with each variety.
These variations make our sweet corn tender, moist, and sweet. Besides its popular use as
corn-on-the-cob, sweet corn can be used in scalloped dishes, succotash, relishes, fritters,
soups, and chowders. Many, but not all, sweet corn varieties are quite acceptable for
freezing.
Trying to decide which sweet corn variety to plant by searching a seed catalog or looking over
a seed rack can be very confusing. Many excellent varieties are available to home
gardeners, and several new ones are developed and introduced each year.
Some factors to consider when you choose varieties are the kernel color, the maturity date,
and disease resistance. Selecting a yellow or white-kerneled corn is a matter of personal
preference. Another choice is to plant a variety that produces bicolor ears, with both yellow
and white kernels. Yellow corn has the nutritional advantage of being a fairly good source of
vitamin A. White corn contains virtually no vitamin A.
Sweet corn may be divided into four distinct types: standard, supersweet, sugary enhanced,
and synergistic. Standard varieties contain a “sugary gene” responsible for the kernels’
sweetness and creamy texture.
Supersweet varieties contain a special gene that makes the kernels sweeter than those of
standard varieties. Supersweet and sugary enhanced varieties convert the sugar to starch
more slowly, preserving the sweetness for a longer time.
Kernels of the supersweet varieties have a crispy texture and contain low amounts of the
water-soluble polysaccharides (complex sugars) that impart the creamy texture to other
sweet corn varieties.
Synergistic varieties are not numerous. Their cobs have one-fourth supersweet kernels and
three-fourths standard kernels. Seeds of this type have the improved emergence
characteristics of standard sweet corn.
Varieties
The maturity dates listed in seed catalogs are relative–the actual number of days to harvest
varies from year to year, and location to location, depending on the actual degree days or
heat units your area receives.
Sweet corn requires warm soil for germination (above 55°F for standard varieties and about
65°F for supersweet varieties). Early plantings of standard sweet corn should be made at the
mean frost-free date unless you use special soil-warming protection such as a polyethylene
mulch film.
The warmer the temperature, the faster the corn grows to maturity. The corn variety you plant
should have an early maturity date, and it should have been developed for weather
conditions in your area.
For a continuous supply of sweet corn throughout the summer, plant an early variety, a
second early variety, and a main crop variety in the first planting. For example, you may wish
to select Sundance (70 days to harvest) for the first early variety, Miracle (85 days to harvest)
for the second early variety, and Jubilee (90 days to harvest) for the main crop variety. Make
a second planting and successive plantings of your favorite main crop or late variety when
three to four leaves have appeared on the seedlings in the previous planting. Plantings can
be made as late as the first week of July in warmer areas of North America.
Seedbed
Soil texture can vary greatly for sweet corn production. A sandy loam is best all-around, but
corn can be grown in clayey or loam soils also. Cultivate the soil when soil moisture will allow
formation of a mud ball and will allow the ball to crumble into pieces under finger pressure.
Cultivation should mix crop residues and organic matter in the top 7 to 8 inches of soil,
destroy current weed growth, and provide a granular-type bed for seeding. Overcultivated
soil becomes powdery and has a tendency to crust. The ideal pH for corn growth is from 6.0
to 8.0.
Use the following planting specifications:
Seeds per foot–four to six (thin to one plant every 6 to 9 inches after emergence)
Row width–30 to 36 inches
Seed depth–1 1/2 to 2 l/2 inches
Planting suggestions
Since sweet corn is wind-pollinated, the plants should be in three or more short rows in place
of one long row. After pollination, kernel growth may be hampered by temperature, moisture,
and soil conditions. This is why some ears may be filled completely while others may not.
As much as possible, isolate supersweet varieties from all other types. Cross-pollination can
take place between supersweet and standard or sugary enhanced (se). If this occurs, it will
affect severely the quality of both types.
One way to isolate corn is to choose varieties with differing lengths of growing season (at
least 10 days difference) and plant them at the same time. This will separate the time of
pollination and reduce the chances of cross-pollination. Another control method is to allow 10
or more days between planting the different types–while providing as much distance as
possible–then your varieties should not cross.
Popcorn and field corn have genes that are dominant over sweet corn. If a cross takes place,
the sweet corn will be tough and starchy.
After the plants are up, thin them 6 to 9 inches apart. Too many seedlings have the same
effect as too many weeds. If you leave them too close, your corn will have small, poorly filled
ears. Good spacing is necessary to ensure adequate sunlight.
Fertilizer
Since corn has a high nitrogen requirement, the first application of nitrogen and other
nutrients should be broadcast before planting. As a general rule, use 2 to 3 pounds of
fertilizer such as 10-10-10 for each 100 square feet of garden area. Spread the fertilizer
evenly over the soil. Work it into the soil 3 to 4 inches deep.
If additional nitrogen is needed, you can sidedress it around the plants before tasseling.
Plants stunted by nutrient deficiency seldom recover to produce up to their potential.
Cultivation and watering
Cultivation should be shallow when necessary to remove other plant competition. Deep
cultivation will destroy much of the root system and reduce yield and quality. The number of
suckers a sweet corn plant produces depends on the variety. You do not have to remove
suckers; their removal does not increase yield–it may reduce it. Corn requires a high supply
of moisture throughout the growing season. The soils should be filled to capacity and then
allowed to dry to 60 percent of water-holding capacity before rewatering. (At 60 percent
moisture, a mud ball at the 5-inch soil depth will crumble under finger pressure into medium -
-sized fragments; it will feel damp. Fingerprints will be left on the ball.)
An adequate supply of soil moisture is critical especially at silking time and at kernel-forming
time. However, avoid waterlogged, poorly drained soils because root decay may occur,
resulting in poor plant growth.
Insects and diseases
These insects may be a problem in sweet corn: corn earworms, cutworms, armyworms, wire-
worms, rootworms, slugs, aphids, spider mites, earwigs, and cucumber beetles.
Diseases seldom are a problem in home gardens. Diseases that may be problems in larger
plantings are root, stalk, and ear rot, seed rot, seedling blight, and smut. For more
information, see FS 242, Discourage Plant Diseases in Your Home Garden.
Harvesting
Generally, depending on temperatures, sweet corn will be ripe 22 to 24 days after silking.
Kernel development is faster during hot weather if soil moisture is adequate. However, if the
air temperature is cool or the soil is dry, maturity will be delayed.
When mature enough to eat, the silks are brown. The end of the ear is blunt, not pointed,
which indicates that kernels at the top are completely filled out. The liquid squeezed from a
kernel will be milky (immature, watery; overmature, solid or creamy).
The prime quality of a corn ear will last about 4 to 5 days before the sugar starts to turn to
starch. Pick when the sugar is at its maximum. Pull cob from stalk with a downward motion
and twist to the side. Corn for canning can be picked when it is in the cream stage.
Sweet corn loses quality quickly after picking, especially at high temperatures. Process as
quickly as possible after harvesting.
After harvest handling
Cool your crop as quickly as possible after harvest–sugar loss from harvested sweet corn is
rapid at high temperatures. If you must keep a fresh corn product for any length of time after
harvest, place it in a moist environment with a temperature as close to 32°F as possible.
Supersweet varieties store much better than standard varieties.
To get the best taste, cook and eat sweet corn the day you pick it.
Preserving corn
Corn may be frozen, canned, or dried. For all methods, husk ears and remove silk. Wash.
Freezing whole kernel corn.
Blanch in boiling water for 4 to 5 minutes. Allow 1 gallon of water for each pound of corn. Cool
promptly in ice water. Drain. Cut the outer third of the kernels from the cob. Pack into
moisture-and vapor-resistant freezing containers, leaving l/2 inch head space. Seal and
freeze at 0°F or below for best quality.
Canning whole kernel corn. Cut the outer third of kernels from the cob. Use either the raw-or
hot-pack method.
Raw pack. Pack corn loosely into jars, leaving 1 inch head space. Add salt, if desired (l/2
teaspoon per pint, 1 teaspoon per quart). Fill jars with boiling water, leaving 1 inch head
space.
Hot pack. Heat kernels to boiling (use 1 pint of water per quart of corn). Pack corn and liquid
into jars, leaving 1 inch head space. Add salt, if desired.
After packing, wipe rims of jars, adjust lids, and process in a pressure canner, following
manufacturer’s directions for venting and operation.
Process pint jars of raw-or hotpacked corn for 55 minutes at 240°F (10 pounds pressure with
a weighted gauge; 11 pounds with a dial gauge). Process quarts for 85 minutes.
Canning cream-style corn. Cut the kernels halfway to the cob, then scrape the cob. Heat
kernels to boiling, using 1 pint of water for each 4 cups of corn. Pack into pint jars, leaving l
inch head space. (Do not use quart jars. Large amounts of cream-style corn heat too slowly
for safe canning.) Process pints for 85 minutes in a pressure canner at 240°F (10 pounds
pressure with a weighted gauge; 11 pounds with a dial gauge).
For an added margin of safety, boil all home-canned corn for at least 10 minutes before
tasting.
Drying. Steam-blanch ears for 5-10 minutes (depending on size) or until milk sets. Cool
promptly in ice water. Drain and cut kernels off the cob. Spread in thin layer on drying trays.
Dry to brittle stage in a dehydrator at 140°F.
Growing Tomatoes
April 13, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment
Tomatoes
Tomatoes are the most popular vegetable in the home garden. They’re a tasty fruit, and they supply vitamin C as well as many minerals needed for proper nutrition. They’re eaten fresh from the garden and processed in several ways for later use.
Soil
Tomatoes are grown on a wide variety of soils. They do best on a garden loam containing a fair supply of organic matter. The soil should be only mildly acid in reaction (pH of 6.0 to 7.0). Light, sandy soils warm up earlier and ripen the first fruits.
Fertilizer
Manure mixed in the soil adds both organic matter and fertilizer. To give the young plants a good start, place a handful (1 to 2 ounces) of a complete fertilizer (4-12-4, 5-10-5, or 5-10-10) in a circle 3 inches away from the plant and 3 to 4 inches deep.
An additional application of nitrogen about fruit set time, placed in a circle 1 foot away from the plant, will help sustain production.
Varieties
The small-vined, determinate varieties are especially good for the home garden where space is limited. Vigorous indeterminate types are preferred for
staking. There are many good tomato varieties, including these:
Red types
* Bush, early to midseason: Santiam, Oregon Spring, Springset, New Yorker, Fireball, Earlirouge, Earlibright, Cold Set, Jetfire, Willamette, Medford, Pilgrim.
* Bush, midseason to late: Pik Red, Pik Rite, Carnival, All Star, Setmore, Spring Giant, Supersonic, Sunny, Celebrity. (Hermiston area: Baja, Keno, Oregon Spring, Valerie.)
* Staking, red: Early Girl, Fantastic, Better Boy (late), Early Cascade, Heavyweight, Keno.
* Cherry, red, indeterminate: Sweet 100, Large German Cherry, Sweetie.
* Cherry, red, determinate: Small Fry.
Yellow types
* Yellow, large-fruited: Orange Queen, Jubilee, Golden Boy.
* Cherry, yellow, determinate: Gold Nugget.
* Cherry, yellow, indeterminate: Yellow Plum.
Propagation
A soil temperature of 60 to 70°F is desirable for seed germination. Plants may be grown from seed in a greenhouse, hot bed, cold frame, or window box, or purchased ready for transplanting. It takes from 5 to 8 weeks to produce good plants from seed, depending on the temperature.
Plant seed in rows in flats of moist garden loam–six to eight seeds per inch. Cover with plastic wrap or glass until plants are up. When the first true leaves appear, transplant into plant bands or other containers 2 to 3 inches in diameter. Fertilize the seedlings by watering once a week with a booster solution, which you make by dissolving 1 to 2 tablespoons of a soluble, complete fertilizer in 1 gallon of water.
Seed also may be planted directly in the garden after mid-April, provided you control weeds by careful hoeing.
Planting
Grow greenhouse plants at cooler temperatures for a few days before you put them into the open ground. Plant as soon as the soil is in good workable condition and danger from frost is past (May 1-10 in most of North America). Disturb the roots as little as possible in transplanting, and set the plants to the depth of the first leaves.
Plants can be set 1 to 3 feet apart, depending on the type of plant and the space available. Water each plant with a pint of booster solution mixed the same as for seedlings. If you direct-seeded, thin to one plant every 6 to 12 inches.
Plastic mulches and plant covers
The use of black plastic ground mulch is recommended, especially in western Oregon. Plastic mulch conserves moisture, controls weeds, increases soil
temperatures, protects fruit from ground rot, enhances earliness, and increases yields and fruit quality.
Because tomatoes grow and set fruit better in a warm soil, some protection is advisable. A “tent” of clear polyethylene plastic is useful for this purpose. As warm weather comes, you can partially or wholly remove the plastic. Sometimes protection in the fall is helpful in extending the harvest season.
Supports for plastic covers over plants can be wickets of 11-gauge wire, 5 feet long, bent to form an arch. Lay sheets of plastic over each side, leaving a small opening at the top for ventilation. Tack the bottom of the plastic to a strip of wood or bury it in the soil on each side of the row. Spring-type clothespins hold the plastic to the wickets and close the ends of the tunnel.
You can make single plant covers by using two wickets, with plastic wrapped around in tepee fashion, leaving an opening at the top. On bright, sunny days, lower the plastic for additional ventilation.
You also can use row covers of spunbonded polyester or propylene, or perforated polyethylene, for 4 to 8 weeks immediately after you transplant or direct-seed.
Always remove the covers when plants begin to flower or if temperatures become excessive under the covers. Don’t allow temperatures to exceed 90°F for more than 2 or 3 consecutive days. Plants under row covers accumulate two to three times more heat than they would exposed to the sun–and they’ll benefit from the 2 to 4° of frost protection at night. Row covers increase not only soil temperatures and root growth but also early yields–and, in some cases, total yields.
Cultivation
Cultivation should be shallow to prevent damage to feeder roots. Cultivate only to control weeds and to improve soil water penetration.
Irrigation
Maintain a uniform moisture level during plant and fruit development for best results. A shallow sawdust, peat, or leaf-mold mulch or black polyethylene will hold moisture for longer periods of time. It’s better to soak the soil thoroughly at intervals of a week to 10 days, rather than to sprinkle frequently.
Sprinkling in the later afternoon or evening may favor development of foliage disease. Drip irrigation or other systems that don’t wet fruit and foliage are advantageous. After the crop starts to ripen, drastically reduce or discontinue irrigation.
Pesticides
* Wear protective clothing and safety devices as recommended on the label. Bathe or shower after each use.
* Read the pesticide label–even if you’ve used the pesticide before. Follow closely the instructions on the label (and any other directions you have).
* Be cautious when you apply pesticides. Know your legal responsibility as a pesticide applicator. You may be liable for injury or damage resulting from pesticide use.
Insect and disease control
Spray or dust only as necessary for specific pests, following the manufacturer’s instructions for mixing. Follow label instructions regarding pesticide use as harvest season nears.
Plant support
Keeping fruit off the ground is important to prevent fruit rot and damage from slugs and cutworms. Various methods are used.
You can make effective supports around each plant with wood or concrete– reinforcing wire. Make them about 18 inches in diameter and 1 to 5 feet high (Figure 1). With this method, no pruning is necessary.
Keep all branches inside the trellis until they grow up and over the top. A clear plastic wrap around the cages will give some early season protection.
Growing Swiss Chard
April 12, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment
Swiss chard is a native of the Mediterranean area. A relative of the beet, it is grown for its tender, vitamin-rich leaves. Its leaves and petioles are cooked to provide a pot herb similar to spinach. Rhubarb chard, with its dark green leaves and red stalks, is a favorite vegetable for the flower border. Other popular varieties are Fordhook Giant, Lucullus, and Perpetual.
Other greens
Other vegetables can be successfully grown in North american gardens to yield leaves for use either uncooked in salads or cooked as greens. Such vegetables include Chinese cabbage and many other Oriental vegetable greens, collards, cress, endive, kale, mustard greens, parsley, and beets and turnips for tops. They can be grown following the same guidelines.
Seed time
Chard (Swiss chard or leaf beet). Plant chard seeds 30 days before the frost-free date for your area. Chard also can be planted in a greenhouse for future transplanting. Suitable varieties are Large Smooth White Rib and Rhubarb Chard, a red-ribbed type.
Chard should be thinned to 4 to 8 inches apart. The row width should be 18 to 24 inches. Chard plants removed during thinning are edible.
Harvesting
Chard can be harvested throughout an entire 3-month growing season. Plants removed at thinning time can be used in salads. Cut outer leaves first about 1 inch from the soil surface with a sharp knife. Take care to ensure the new inner stems and growing points are not damaged.
Preserving greens
For longer-term storage, spinach and chard may be canned or frozen. For both methods, select young, tender leaves that are not wilted, diseased, or insect- damaged. Wash well in small batches. Continue rinsing and draining until water is clear and free of grit. Cut out tough stems and midribs if necessary.
Canning. Place 1 pound of greens at a time in a cheesecloth bag or blancher basket and steam 3 to 5 minutes, or until well wilted. Fill pint or quart jars loosely with greens and add fresh boiling water, leaving 1 inch headspace. Add 1/4 teaspoon salt per pint, if desired. Adjust lids and process pints for 70 minutes, quarts for 90 minutes. After pressure is reached, process at 10 pounds in a weighted-gauge canner (11 pounds if you use a dial gauge).
The pressure must be adjusted at higher altitudes. With a weighted-gauge pressure canner, use a 15-pound weight above 1,000 feet altitude. With a dial-gauge canner, use 12 pounds pressure from 2,001 to 4,000 feet, 13 pounds from 4,001 to 6,000 feet, or 14 pounds for 6,001 to 8,000 feet altitude.
Freezing. Blanch spinach for 2 minutes (1 1/2 minutes if very tender).
Blanch Swiss chard for 3 to 4 minutes. Cool in cold running water (or ice water). Drain and pack into moisture-and vapor-resistant freezing containers, leaving 1/2-inch headspace. Seal and freeze at 0°F or below for best quality.
Growing lettuce
April 12, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment
Lettuce, which is nearly synonymous with “salad” to many people, is one of the most widely grown vegetables in home gardens. It is a popular, tasty, low-calorie food that is easy to grow and takes little space. Lettuce is a native of Asia and Europe. Lettuce grows best at temperatures of 55 to 60°F. For crisphead varieties, day temperatures of 70 to 75°F and night temperatures of about 45°F are important for high quality yields. High temperatures cause lettuce plants to bolt, or produce a seed-stalk before the plants are ready to harvest. In addition, the leaves may become bitter and have a poorer texture. In cooler-than-desirable temperatures, lettuce plants will grow very slowly. However, lettuce plants often are able to survive temperatures as low as 29°F without damage. Of the four main types of lettuce, three are easy to grow: looseleaf, butterhead (Bibb), and romaine (cos). The fourth kind, called crisphead or iceberg lettuce, demands slightly more exacting climatic and cultural conditions. The looseleaf varieties, which form clusters of leaves rather than heads, probably are the most commonly grown. Because looseleaf lettuces are highly perishable, they sometimes are unavailable in grocery stores–so they’re especially valuable to grow at home. Looseleaf varieties do not require exacting conditions; they mature quickly and tolerate some shade. Popular looseleaf varieties include green leaf varieties Slobolt, Salad Bowl, Black-seeded Simpson, Grand Rapids, and Waldmann’s Green. Red leaf varieties include Ruby, Oak Leaf, Deep Red, Red Sails, and Prizehead. Looseleaf lettuces vary considerably in appearance, with leaves that range from smooth to wrinkled and green to red. Butterhead or Bibb lettuces often are favored by home gardeners because the loose heads have an attractive appearance, and the leaves taste exceptionally good. These leaves are relatively thick and have a smooth buttery texture as well as a distinctive flavor. Butterhead lettuces sometimes are not available in supermarkets because the leaves tend to tear and bruise easily; so like looseleaf lettuces, the butterhead varieties are a bit of a delicacy. Popular butterhead and Bibb varieties are Buttercrunch, Bibb, Big Boston, Dark Green Boston, Butter King, and Tania. (Balisto, Vista, and Divina have multiple disease resistance.) Romaine or Cos varieties produce tall, upright-growing heads. As the heads grow, the leaf tips curl inward, thereby blanching the inner leaves. The leaves usually are fairly heavy and coarse and have large ribs. However, they are sweet and tender to eat. Common romaine varieties include Parris Island Cos, Valmain Cos, White Parris, Corsair, Cosmo, and Alpi. Crisphead or iceberg lettuce varieties produce the familiar firm heads with a brittle leaf texture. The leaves of most crisphead varieties are tough and firm enough to withstand the rough treatment of harvesting, packing, and long-distance shipping. Because of these characteristics, crisphead varieties are the most important commercial lettuces and nearly always are available in supermarkets. For best production, crisphead varieties require full sunlight and a longer, cooler growing season than other types of lettuce. Three of the many crisphead varieties are Salinas, Great Lakes, and Ithaca. (New varieties with multiple disease resistance include Target, Alpha, Bullseye, Top Gun, Patriot, and Warrior.) Lettuce is a short-season crop. Looseleaf varieties usually require only 40 to 50 days from seeding to maturity. Butterhead and romaine varieties take 60 to 70 days from seed to maturity, and crisphead varieties take 65 to 85 days to mature.
Harvesting
Lettuce thinnings can be used for early salads. The lettuce heads should be solid but not overmature when harvested. Butterhead can be harvested as soon as the heads form. Leaf lettuces can be harvested any time the leaves are big enough to use. Some people prefer to harvest only the outer or lower leaves, allowing the center of the plant to continue growing for later harvest. Others prefer to cut the entire plant at once so they can enjoy the tender, light green leaves from the center.
Seed time
Lettuce. Seed lettuce as soon as you can cultivate the soil in the spring, usually about 4 to 6 weeks before the last killing frost (see Table 1). Minimum soil temperature for planting is 50°F When the soil temperature is 50 to 60°F, lettuce and spinach seed should germinate in 5 to 10 days.
After the initial planting, make subsequent plantings every 2 weeks to provide season-long harvest. Place early plantings where they get full sunlight. Make your later plantings, in the hotter summer months, under a shade screen to filter sunlight. This practice prevents bolting (seed stalk development) and bitterness.
For an exceptionally early crop, start lettuce indoors and transplant seedlings outdoors when temperatures allow. Sow seeds indoors 6 to 8 weeks before the anticipated time of planting in the outdoor garden. When the plants have four to five leaves, harden them off by gradually exposing them to cooler temperatures and direct sunlight. In addition, reduce the amount of water they receive. After the plants are properly hardened, you can transplant them into the garden even though light frosts may still occur.
The average packet of lettuce contains 0.1 ounce, about 2,000 seeds. Many gardeners tend to overplant a given planting. One technique to obtain a more orderly cropping is weekly sowings of 10 to 12 seeds in pots or flats rather than sowing directly in the garden.
With diligent sowing and transplanting, the home gardener can have just enough lettuce–not too much and not too little. This transplant approach saves garden space for other vegetables, and you can transplant the lettuce between vegetables that take longer to mature such as tomatoes, eggplant, cucumbers, and corn. This results in saving additional garden space.
Flower beds also are good spots for tucking away a lettuce plant or two. Lettuce, because of its small size and fast growth, also can be grown in small containers. Soil 6 inches deep, regular watering, and feed are the only requirements for success.
Preserving greens
You can store unwashed fresh greens for a few days in the refrigerator if you use appropriate containers. Plastic bags or covered plastic containers will prevent loss of moisture needed to maintain freshness. After several days, greens can be expected to wilt and lose flavor and nutritive value.
Growing Spinach
April 11, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment
Spinach is a native of Asia. It is one of the most important of the greens or pot herb plants. Besides its traditional use as a hot vegetable side dish, spinach is gaining popularity as an ingredient is tossed salads and mixed casseroles. Not only does spinach offer a distinctive taste and an appetizing, dark green color, but it’s also highly nutritious.
The two types of spinach are cool season or broadleaf, and warm season or New Zealand spinach, which is entirely different taxonomically from broadleaf spinach but similar in taste and appearance. New Zealand spinach welcomes long, hot days and will yield well until frost. New Zealand spinach is particularly suited to small container vegetable gardening because it grows back after cutting.
Cool season spinach forms a rosette of foliage 8 to 10 inches across. The leaves are smooth in varieties such as Hybrid No. 7 or savoyed or crinkled in varieties such as American. They require cool weather and will blossom and form seeds with the coming of long, hot days averaging more than 75°F.
Some spinach varieties are slower to bolt (produce seed stalk) than others. The name long-standing often is applied to slow-bolting varieties such as Olympia, Jade, Symphony, Melody, and Long Standing Bloomsdale, which are especially good for spring planting. Varieties more suited for fall harvest are Wolter, Hybrid 424, Baker, St. Helens, and Skookum. In parts of Oregon where winters are mild, spinach may be grown over winter by seeding in mid-to late September. Suitable varieties are St. Helens, Jade, Chinook II, Mazurka, and Polka.
Spinach and Swiss chard. Curly top is a virus disease problem on late spring-planted spinach during most years east of the Cascade Mountains. Symptoms include clearing of veins in leaves and leaf curling with sharp protuberances from the veins on the leaf under-sides. An increase in the number of rootlets also may occur. Leaves may be thickened and somewhat brittle. Beet western yellows virus and several mildew diseases can occur on spinach in western Oregon.
Curly top virus is transmitted by the beet leafhopper, which over-winters on desert plants. As the desert dries, the insects move to cultivated crops. Early and late-planted spinach escape these leafhopper movements.
Fusarium wilt and fusarium root rot are fungal diseases that may attack spinach or chard. The fungi are present in most soils. Symptoms include pale leaf color, wilting, curling of the leaves, rotting of the root system, and plant death. The most effective control is to use varieties that are fusarium-resistant.
Rotating the crop from one location to another in subsequent years and using good cultural practices such as proper watering and good fertility also will help. Chard varieties such as Parma Giant are resistant to root rot and the curly top disease.
Seed time
Spinach. Plant spinach seeds about 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost in the spring or 6 to 8 weeks before the first expected frost in the fall. To provide a continuous supply of spinach during the harvest period, make successive seed sowings at 2- to 3-week intervals. Since spinach requires cool weather and will form stalks with the coming of long, hot days averaging more than 75°F spinach lovers will need to plant “spinach substitutes” if the summer months in their area cause seed stalk formation.
These so-called types of spinach include New Zealand Spinach (Tetragonia expansa), Malaboi Spinach (Basella alba), and Tampala Spinach (Amaranth Spinach). All provide a bonanza of unusual, tasty greens to whet summer appetites.
Thin cool season, broad-leafed spinach to 2 to 4 inches apart. The row width should be 12 to 18 inches. Plants removed during thinning are edible.
Cultivation and watering
Cultivation should be shallow when necessary to remove weeds. Deep cultivation close to the plants will destroy much of the root system and reduce vigor. This reduces yield and quality.
Harvesting
Spinach is ready to harvest when the largest leaves are 6 to 8 inches long, or about 6 weeks after planting. To harvest, cut the plant off at the soil surface. Use only the tender leaves and side shoots of New Zealand spinach.