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Volume Vegetable Gardening – Part 1, by J.T.

This article describes the steps required to raise a variety of 14 vegetable plants from seed starting to a successful harvest. I’ve been at this for 50 years and feel like I am getting closer to getting it done right.

I raise vegetables and fruit, manly to sell from a roadside stand. Yearly, I grow about 4,200 pounds of vegetables and 1,500 pounds of apples, plums, and pears. Our family uses only 30% of this yield, so that leaves a lot to sell.

The following are what I believe are the most important preparation and focus points for a successful garden:

• Your outside garden area will be best prepared if your soil has at least a 3-inch layer of compost over the entire area placed there at the end of last year’s harvest.
• Best date to start seeds will be listed. Don’t start too early and don’t start too late.
• The amount you can expect to harvest from each seed will be listed by number of plants or pounds per plant. Don’t start more seeds than you expect will produce a sufficient harvest. On average, 10% of your seeds won’t make it, and if they are more than two years old, increase the loss to 20% or more.
• Start plants in pots that are placed under grow lights and left in a warm room, or are started in the greenhouse. I use 3.5″ square black plastic containers that are 3.25″ deep.
• If you don’t have a greenhouse, your seed starting date should be delayed by the number of days I am showing that they need to be left in the greenhouse before transplanting outside.
• All plants require outside soil preparation. Some garden spots need to be tilled and level before planting. Other plants such as Cole crops, cucumbers, squash, potatoes, and tomatoes don’t need the ground to be tilled.
• Some seeds are best to start under lights indoors, or in the greenhouse, and others can be directly planted in the garden.
• The amount of produce you can expect to harvest and the length of the season will be shown.
• The date you should expect each plant to start delivering a harvest will be estimated as well as the date when the harvest will be finished producing.

Before getting into the details, let’s discuss weather, temperature, and light. This garden is in Zone 7, located in the Pacific Northwest. Here, the last frost ends about March 31st. The first frost of the season is Oct. 15th or later. Nighttime temperatures never rise above 55 degrees. During summer days, the temperature will reach low 70’s in mid-July through the end of August with only an occasional day rising to the high 70’s. Being close to the Canadian border means days are long with lots of light. Storms of wind and rain are rare from May first thorough mid-September. The weather at this location allows for growing vegetables from mid-March to the end of October. So let’s get started.

Here are the fourteen plants:
1. Beets
2. Broccoli
3. Cabbage
4. Cauliflower
5. Carrots
6. Cucumbers
7. Garlic
8. Hubbard squash
9. Onions
10. Peas
11. Potatoes
12. String beans
13. Tomatoes
14. Zucchini

Beets

1. I start golden beets in our house under grow lights on March 16th. These are scheduled to reach production in 50 days from start date. First, decide how many beets you want at harvest time. As a reminder, beets can be left in the ground many days after reaching maturity before harvesting, and they become sweeter with age.

2. Using the small containers defined earlier, begin by filling each with 90% starting material acquired from the big box stores, then soak each one with water. Next, put 5 to 6 seeds in each pot, then cover 1/4″ with potting soil, then carefully add enough water to soak the last 1/4″. (Here, you are trying to avoid the seeds from floating in the mixture, which would result in the seeds being started in an uneven depth). Keep the material damp while the plants emerge under the grow lights inside a warm room.

3. On March 31st, the containers with the plant will be ready to send to the greenhouse for a week or two. After a month from seed starting, the plants should be ready to be “hardened off”. Set them outside in direct sunlight a few hours for 3 or 4 days.

4. After hardening them off it’s time to transplant the beets to an area of the garden that has been turned over and leveled. Mid-March is still quite cool here, but beets do okay in ground temperatures of 50 to 60 degrees. Each plant should be about 6″ apart. 50 plants will fit an area 5′ by 6′. Keep the ground moist during the growing time. In less than 30 days, beets will be ready to harvest.

Broccoli, Cabbage, and Cauliflower

1. I start these seed in the greenhouse about July 1st for harvesting in late fall or winter. Broccoli will be ready for harvest in October and can be left in the ground at least through November or December or until the temperature drifts in the low 20’s. Cabbage will be ready for harvest in November and can be left in the ground at least through December or January or until the temperature drifts in the high teens. Cauliflower will be ready for harvest in October and can be left in the ground for only a couple of weeks after maturity at which time they lose their appearance and taste.

2. After removing the main head of broccoli, many mini side shoots will emerge days later, allowing for a continued harvest. Some call these side shoot “broccoleene”.

3. Using the small containers, start by filling each with 90% starting material then soak each one. Next, put 10 to 12 seeds in each pot, then cover 1/8″ with potting soil, then slowly add enough water to soak the last 1/8″, trying hard to avoid the seeds from floating in the mixture. Keep the material damp while the plants emerge in the greenhouse.

4. About July 20th, remove the plants from their original container and transplant the 3 or 4 healthy ones in another 3.5″ pot. Keep them in the greenhouse until ready to harden off at about the end of July.

5. In early August, transplant to an area of the garden that has been turned over and leveled. This is usually where an earlier crop was harvested such as string beans or potatoes. Each plant should be transplanted about 1.5′ apart. 20 plants will fit in two rows in an area 5′ by 15′. Keep the ground moist during the growing time

Carrots

1. This seed is started in the garden in a spot that has been turned over and leveled. Do not attempt to start in pots to transplant later. Every time I attempted to do this, two carrots would frequently fuse together, resulting in a bunch that customers rejected. You may get a higher yield using the transplant method, but this will cause many of the carrots to be deformed.

2. Here is the planting method I recommend. On March 21st, mix 2,000 seeds in a 5-gallon bucket filled with 3 gallons of potting soil. Make sure the soil where the seed is to be planted is wet by putting at least 1″ of water on the bed just prior to planting. Spread the mixture in an area 5′ by 8′. Keep the area damp twice daily until the seeds emerge and then water at least once a week.

3. The method of starting seeds just described will result in successfully raising about 1,000 very beautiful and healthy carrots. No thinning will be necessary. Every square foot will have about 25 carrots equally distributed. Begin weeding the bed shortly after you are able to distinguish a carrot from a weed, usually about 2 weeks after seeding.

4. This early planting will result in a harvest date of around mid-June. You can continue to start carrots in my zone as late as early June for a late Autumn or Winter harvest. Carrots get sweeter if left in the ground after maturity until spring arrives as long as they are covered with compost to keep from freezing.

Cucumbers

1. These need ground heat to grow outside, so they will not be started in the greenhouse, or in the house under lights, until May 8th. After transplanting outside they will start producing cucs about August 5th and will continue until about September 15th. (In slightly warmer climates where temperatures reach mid to low 80s in the summer, cucumbers can be producing by mid-July.) A second crop can be started a couple of weeks after the first seeds were planted which pushes the harvest period to the end of September.

2. Using the small containers, start by filling each with 80% starting material then soak each one. Next, put 3 seeds in each pot, then cover 1/2″ with potting soil, then slowly add enough water to soak the last 1/2″, trying hard to avoid the seeds from floating in the mixture. Keep the material damp while the plants emerge in the greenhouse.

3. By May 28th, leave the plants in their original container and get them ready to be hardened off. Set them outside in direct sunlight a few hours for 3 or 4 days.

4. By June 1st, it should be warm enough to plant in the soil outside. In a 5′ by 4′ wide area, build a level bed with 3″ high sides, and place 2 plants, at opposite ends, in each one. Flood each enclosed mound with an inch of water’. Keep the ground moist during the growing time. In just 60 days, cucumbers will be ready to start picking.

5. How many plants will you need? Last, year, I grew pickling cucs that produced 230 quarts. This required two starting dates; one on May 8th of 20 plants and the other on May 19th of another 20 plants. Many of the second planting were sold on our roadside stand. Slicing cucumber plants can easily produce two cucs per day per plant during the period of early August through the middle of September.

Garlic

1. Find a quality farmer that specializes in garlic. I like the Susanville brand of softneck. Garlic cloves must first be separated from the bulbs. In a flat well turned over garden space, plant each clove 6″ apart one 1″ deep, root end down. Each bulb has from 8 to 15 cloves, so plan accordingly. I start all my seeds October 15 and harvest about July 1st the following summer.

2. The seeds do not need water where I live since the rainy season has already begun and the soil is well lubricated. However, come April, they will need an inch of water at least every week until a few weeks before harvest when watering should be stopped.

3. When it is time to harvest, dig up each plant and place them in a cool dark place to dry, leaving the stems connected to the bulb. When dry, I cut off the bulb, trim each one and place them on the stand for sale. This year, I am growing 700 bulbs.

Hubbard Squash

1. Except for combining this squash with meat for our dog food and giving some away to those who love it, we eat less than 5% ourselves. However, I grow about 400 pounds each year as a backup food source in case TEOTWAWKI occurs. It stores all winter and is a complete food source if one had to live on this alone. By April 1st, I begin giving the squash, left over from last year, away to those who love it. Start this seed in the greenhouse, or in the house under lights, May 18 and be ready to harvest in September. Hubbard plants use up lots of garden space, so it is best to select an area that allows for a spread of at least 15 feet per plant. Each one will produce two, 10 to 40 pound squash.

2. Using the small containers, start by filling each with 70% starting material then soak each one. Next, put 2 to 3 seeds in each pot, then cover 1″ with potting soil, then slowly add enough water to soak the 1″ of seed cover, trying hard to avoid the seeds from floating in the mixture. Keep the material damp while the plants emerge in the greenhouse.

3. By June 1st, transplant each individual plant in the 3.5″ square pot. Keep them in the greenhouse until ready to hardening them off on about June 8th.

4. In early June, it should be warm enough to plant in the soil outside. In a 5′ by 4′ wide area, build a level bed with 3″ high sides, and place 2 plants, at opposite ends, in each one. Flood each enclosed mound with an inch of water’. Keep the ground moist during the growing time. Early September is the time to harvest the Hubbard.

5. This squash needs to be prepared for storage. After harvesting the squash, be sure that each one has not been broken or cracked. Put all of the healthy ones in a wheelbarrow full of bleach water and wash each individually. Place in a dry cool area out of sunlight for long-term storage.

(To be concluded tomorrow, in Part 2.)