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- Path: sparky!uunet!lhdsy1!nntpserver.chevron.com!usho44.hou281.chevron.com!hmjem
- From: hmjem@usho44.hou281.chevron.com (M.J.Emanuel)
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Re: essential veggies to grow
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.122217@usho44.hou281.chevron.com>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 18:22:17 GMT
- References: <1992Dec29.045857.15192@math.ucla.edu> <1992Dec29.144659.3004@hou.amoco.com>
- Sender: news@nntpserver.chevron.com (USENET News System)
- Organization: Chevron
- Lines: 78
-
-
- Hi Keerthi,
-
- I tried to send you mail after your pre-Xmas post, but it bounced. I'll try
- mailing and posting this time.
-
-
- In article <1992Dec29.144659.3004@hou.amoco.com>, you write:
- |>
- |> Alice Ramirez writes:
- |> > If we are going to discuss essential vegetables to grow, the ones that
- |> > absolutely are inferior in the stores, I have to cast my vote for homegrown
- |> > leaf lettuce. There is no comparison between the tender, picked-slightly-
- |> > immature leafs grown at home and those motheaten heads of pale, medium
- |> > and/or reddish lettuce
- |>
- |>
- |> I am going to start my FIRST garden this summer. Santa was good and brought me
- |> the book entitled "Square Foot Gardening" I am planning to try the same concepts
- |> but in big pots or wooden boxes. I live in an apartment in New Orleans... long hot
- |> summers
- |>
- |>
- |> The vegetables I am planning to grow are:
- |>
- |> Any recommendations on what kind to buy and where to get them would be greatly
- |> appreciated.
- |>
-
- When I lived in Slidell, I got a vegetable info sheet put out by the state from a garden
- store. It lists proven varieties and planting times for growing vegies in Louisiana. The
- gardening store I got it from also had a bi-monthly newsletter from the St. Tammany "County"
- Extension Service. You can probably find the former in any reputable nusery, or if you
- can't, call the Orleans Extension Office.
-
- |> a. tomatoes ... just enough for me and my husband... I am thinking 1 plant with
- |> three plantings
-
- I tried Creole and Better Boy varieties last year. Creole is supposed to be suited to
- Southern summers. Both did pretty well, but the squirrels got more than their fair share!
- If you buy transplants from a garden store, you should plant them in the first week of March.
- If you are growing from seed, you should plant them now.
-
- |>
- |> b. Lettuce.. I was thinking Boston lettuce... but I would like to try others...
- |> store bought lettuce is expensive and you end up throwing most of it away.
- |>
-
- Lettuce likes cool weather. Leaf lettuce is matures the fastest of the 3 types (leaf,
- heading, and semi-heading). So your best bet
- at lettuce in the South is leaf lettuce, so that it can mature before it gets too warm.
- Then the plants turn bitter and go to seed. I don't know whether Boston lettuce is a
- leaf variety or not. Last year I grew Black Seeded Simpson. My garden was too shady and I
- planted too late so and most of the lettuce bolted before it could mature.
- You need to plant it within the next month!
-
- |> c. Yellow, Red and Green Bell Peppers --- I am hoping they will be easy to grow.
- |>
-
- Green peppers are immature Red or Yellow sweet peppers. Buy green pepper plants (California
- Wonder is one variety) and leave the fruit on the plant till the get red. You have to
- get special varieties to get yellow peppers. You might have to grow them from seed, or
- you can plant sweet banana peppers. I grew bell, sweet banana, and cayenne peppers
- last year, and yes they are easy to grow. Hot peppers do better in the hot Southern summers
- than sweet peppers though.
-
- |> d. Something else ... kind of exotic... but I haven't figured out what.
- |>
-
- I checked out a book from the St. Tammany library last year called "Unusual Vegetables".
- (I wanted a copy for Xmas, but it's out of print.) The title tells it all. See if you can find it.
-
- |>
- |>
- |> Keerthi McIntosh
-
- Jeff Emanuel
- hmjem@chevron.com
-