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- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!darwin.sura.net!ra!shiva4175.nrl.navy.mil!user
- From: karpen@nrlfs1.nrl.navy.mil (Judy Karpen)
- Subject: Re: Potted vegetables, ideas needed.
- Message-ID: <karpen-241292160757@shiva4175.nrl.navy.mil>
- Followup-To: rec.gardens
- Sender: usenet@ra.nrl.navy.mil
- Organization: NRL
- References: <1992Dec21.153256.5860@almserv.uucp> <1992Dec24.195247.5353@almserv.uucp>
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 21:46:28 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
- [earlier discussion deleted]
- > Question:
- > How do other gardeners, with tight space limitations, decide what to grow
- > and what to accept as "having to come from the grocer"?
- >
- > Would you really trade an extra vine of red beefsteaks for a bowl of
- > purple mashed potatoes? ( If so I _promise_ I'll try the potatoes. )
- >
- >
- > - Andrew -
-
- My criteria are very similar to yours, Andrew (sort of like convergent
- evolution? ;^> ) I also have a very small garden (three 3-4'x 6-8' raised
- beds,
- plus an asparagus patch), and also started growing things in pots out of
- desperation. Sun isn't as much of a problem for me, though, except for
- 1 bed that was placed too close to a tree (my own fault). If i had more
- space, I'd try potatoes, melons, squash (well, maybe not), and other
- sprawlers. Instead, I tend to grow things I can't get in stores, don't
- attract bugs or otherwise need lots of attention, AND that I eat alot of
- (hence the asparagus).
-
- Here in the DC area one can find excellent organic potatoes of all colors,
- for example, and I don't eat them constantly, so they're not a
- priority with me (although i'm sure homegrown WOULD would taste better).
- Greens are a big item in my diet, the more exotic types aren't often
- available in stores, and they're easy to grow, so I grow lots of them:
- broccoli rabe, mustard, swiss chard, kale, etc. (next year, growing mizuna
- for sure). Tomatoes, of course, but I find it hard to fight fungal
- diseases because I don't have enough beds to do a decent rotation. Beans
- (pole or bush) are a necessity --- the pole beans take up less horizontal
- space, taste great, and bear for months. Ditto for yard-long beans, which
- are fun besides. Peppers (hot and sweet red) also are a staple for me,
- and can be grown easily in pots. Herbs -- basil, plus perennials that are
- tucked in here and there (just thymes and rosemary at present). I also
- grow garlic, although it started just as a companion-planting exercise
- and I haven't quite caught on to when to harvest it. This year I removed
- the tops when they wilted, then cleverly mulched the beds without marking
- the garlic sites, so I lost most of the bulbs! Really Dumb. Another set of
- vegetables worth growing are Chinese vegs. like bok choy, white radish,
- etc., unless you live near a good Oriental grocery and/or don't care
- whether it's organic.
-
- Marginal vegs. IMHO: Tried carrots but was disappointed; since organic
- carrots are very common in stores I might not bother again. Tried okra this
- year
- too, but they produce sequentially so one would need lots of plants to get
- a decent quantity at one time. Anyone know if there's some variety (pref.
- dwarf) that is more productive? The flowers sure are pretty! Radishes: easy
- to grow, but i always wonder why i bother (except for black radishes, which
- are hard to buy and good to eat). Same for lettuce --- slugs like it more
- than I do, anyway.
-
- Things I've considered trying: spinach (too easy to buy), cucumbers (bug
- magnets), radicchio (had 1 plant & liked it), chinese broccoli, beets.
- Question: Is it worth growing onions, either scallion or bulb types, in a
- small
- garden?
-
-
- Judy Karpen "pushing back the frontiers of science"
- karpen@nrlfs1.nrl.navy.mil
-