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- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Path: sparky!uunet!utcsri!utgpu!bae
- From: bae@gpu.utcs.utoronto.ca (Beverly Erlebacher)
- Subject: Re: Early Start Ideas
- Message-ID: <BzMp50.49p@gpu.utcs.utoronto.ca>
- Organization: UTCS Public Access
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 21:31:48 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
- In article <1992Dec18.132003.13774@kodak.kodak.com> bryant@neural.Kodak.COM (Steve Bryant) writes:
- >Living in the great white north (Rochester NY) I am constantly
- >thinking of ways to get more out of my growing season. With a blanket
- >of snow a foot deep I am huddled in my house dreaming thoughts
- >of foot long carrots and basket ball sized cabbages... and how
- >to get them with ten days of growing season.
-
- I always get a kick out of this sort of thing. Do you know that there is
- a whole large country complete with farmers and market gardeners located
- to the north of you? Also, many people are very successful in raising
- veggies in U.S. areas like New England, Minnesota, and Montana, not to
- mention Alaska!
-
- No problem raising "foot long carrots and basket ball sized cabbages"
- in your climatic area. Basket ball sized melons are iffy, but not
- impossible.
-
- >I'd like to here from the friged netters what tricks they have learned
- >to eek out a few extra days of growing season, or any way out ideas
- >they would like to try.
-
- Stretching the season is not too difficult. Just using some bits of
- scrap wire and some plastic dropsheets left from when we painted the
- house last year, I'm still harvesting chinese cabbage, bok choy, tah tsai,
- winter radishes, endive, green onions, parsley and 6 kinds of lettuce.
- I'd have spinach if the slugs hadn't gotten it. This week may be the
- limit for stretching it here this year - it is supposed to get down
- near 0F later this week. Next year I may hack up something a little
- better designed and keep veggies all the way through the winter. Of
- course, they don't grow much after the middle of November or so, but
- they stay crisp and fresh and very tasty!
-
- I hope to start harvesting salad veggies from the garden by late April
- next year, and if I get better organized, even earlier. This means eating
- from the garden for 8 months of the year at 43 degrees north latitude.
-
- This past spring I spread some old clear plastic dropsheets on the garden
- beds in March to both warm them a little faster and keep them from getting
- even soggier in the heavy rains. This let me plant sooner, as my heavy soil
- can't be worked when it is wet.
-
- Plastic lasts for quite a few years as long as you only use it in spring
- and fall. Summer sun deteriorates it rapidly.
-
- There are a lot of books around with good ideas on extending the season
- at both ends. Look around your public library. Reading gardening books
- is a good way to cope with winter in any case!
-
- Here are some suggestions:
-
- The Harrowsmith Northern Gardener by Jennifer Bennett
- Jeff Ball's 60-Minute Vegetable Garden by Jeff Ball
- High-Yield Intensive Gardening (Rodale Press)
- Organic Gardening in a Cold Climate (by ??)
- The Cook's Garden by Shepherd Ogden
- Step by Step Organic Vegetable Gardening by Shepherd Ogden
-
- and lots of other stuff written by New England and other Northern gardeners,
- a most enthusiastic lot, undeterred by cold soils and climate!
-
- Beverly Erlebacher
- Toronto, Ontario Canada
-