home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Path: sparky!uunet!timbuk.cray.com!walter.cray.com!helium!gwv
- From: gwv@helium.cray.com (George Vandenberghe)
- Subject: Re: essential veggies to grow
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.121559.2043@walter.cray.com>
- Lines: 61
- Sender: gwv@helium (George Vandenberghe)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: helium.cray.com
- Organization: Cray Research, Inc.
- References: <1992Dec29.045857.15192@math.ucla.edu> <1992Dec29.144659.3004@hou.amoco.com>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 12:15:58 CST
-
- In article <1992Dec29.144659.3004@hou.amoco.com>, zkym02@hou.amoco.com (Keerthi Y. McIntosh) writes:
- |>
- |> 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.
- |>
- |> a. tomatoes ... just enough for me and my husband... I am thinking 1 plant with
- |> three plantings
- |>
- |> 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.
- |>
- |> c. Yellow, Red and Green Bell Peppers --- I am hoping they will be easy to grow.
- |>
- |> d. Something else ... kind of exotic... but I haven't figured out what.
- |>
- |>
- |>
- |> Keerthi McIntosh
- |>
- |>
-
- I had good luck with buttercrunch lettuce in Tallahassee in spring (Feb-June).
- Peppers are an excellent choice; yes they are easy to grow. I have
- grown sweet 100 tomatoes in a hanging basket in Tallahassee. I like Early Girl and Better Boy
- but these are full sized tomatoes and need at least a five gallon pot and
- six square feet of space per plant. I have heard that Patio is a good
- pot tomato, growing about three feet high. Burpee Pixie is also good
- but smaller at about 18". Both tend to set more fruits than they
- can support and then the fruit quality suffers and the plant stops
- growing new leaves and dies. Blossom pinching
- prevents this problem.
- I found that day neutral strawberries were a real treat from March through
- June. If you get full sun, you might want to consider them. Summer heat
- beats them back but some will survive and make runners in the fall for next
- year. I got four to ten berries per day from four square feet of planting
- area. I used sweetheart, a novel seed grown variety available from Park.
- Tristar is probably better but I never tried it in the South. They require
- good drainage and like cool roots. The combination of waterlogged soil and
- heat is deadly. I found my potted ones did better in sand with a LITTLE clay
- than in various potting soils because the sand drained well.
- Garden stores or nurseries should have everything you need. Tomato
- , lettuce, and pepper seeds are also sold in hardware stores and even
- grocery stores. You need to get moving though, the lettuce can be planted
- now and you can start tomato and pepper seedlings in early January for
- planting outdoors after frost (Probably sometime in March in your area).
-