Good crops for the beginning gardener

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Revision as of 07:25, 20 June 2012 by John (talk | contribs) (→‎Kale)
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Beans

Main article Bean (Phaseolus vulgaris)
A green bean.jpg

Only sow when there's no danger anymore for frost or night frost. For the region where i have my garden (temperate climate, northern hemisphere) this is after May 15. You can sow until half July, depending on the species. Don't add fresh manure to the soil, but beans like a humus-rich soil so you can add some old compost or saw dust to prevent the beans from rotting.

Beans like full sun and dislike cold and wet weather.

Sow the beans 7 per stick or group of plants and keep the five best of them. Cover the seeds with ca 2 cm of moist soil.

Beans growing onto sticks: You may need to help the beans fix to the stick with little ropes. The bean twiners coil anti-clockwise, seen from above.

Pick those beans that are big enough. Picking the beans stimulates the growth of more beans.

Beetroot

Main article Beetroot
Beta vulgaris subsp. vulgaris var. conditiva, Rote Rübe.JPG

You can sow beetroot directly into the soil. It helps to put the seeds a few days in water to make them germinate faster. You can also sow beets in pots and then plant them out, but because beets have taproots you cannot keep them long in pots. Thin the beets at 15 cm in the row.

Desired pH = 6-6.5 (a bit acid).

Beetroots need to grow in the full sun and don't tolerate shade.

They don't appreciate a lot of nitrogen fertilizer, so don't give them too much compost. However, they do like some potassium added.

Lettuce is a good companion plant for beetroot.

For winter storage harvest beetroot before it begins to freeze. Twist off the foliage with your hands, don't cut it with a knife. When you cut beetroot stems with a knife, the juices in the turnip will bleed out, and not when you twist them off with your hands.

Carrot

Main article Carrot
Daucus carota Sturm12033.jpg

Carrots like any soil but rocks will deform them. They also don't like and don't need compost or manure. I always sow them in a field that was composted the year before and where another crop has grown on that compost. They grow well even in soils that are so poor that most other crops won't develop.

Sow summer carrots from February to the end of June. Winter carrots from March to May. Add wet sand to the seeds and keep them a few days like this, then sow the seeds together with the sand. The sand helps you sow regularly and the moist seeds germinate faster. Sow ca 2 cm deep. To find back the line (carrots grow very slowly during the first month or so), you can add some radish seed. I usually plant bulb onions in the lines, each one or two hand widths an onion. This also shows the line and it prevents carrot flies from damaging your crop.

After a few weeks you need to thin the small plants; give winter carrots a bit more space.

Carrots are said to be useful companion plants for tomatoes as they increase tomato production. I haven't tried this out yet.

Carrots grow best in full sun but tolerate some shade.

Carrots tolerate some frost. I usually keep them outside under a sheath of hay until it begins to freeze continually. Dig them out and store the roots without the leaves covered with clean sand in a box in a cellar or other cool place.

Celery

Main article Celery
Young celery in spring in greenhouse.jpg

The celery of which the leaves are used, leaf celery, is sown in spring in March and later again in September. I usually sow in pots and plant them out later. You can also mix the seeds with moist sand and let them start to germinate before sowing outside. In September you can sow in pots or under glass. You can actually sow through the entire summer, but the plants won't become as big as those sown in March.

Spring celery can be harvested in August-September. Autumn celery from February to April. Cut or pick leaf celery when they are about 15 cm high, but don't cut out the heart so you can harvest again.

Celery root can be pre-sown from February to April and planted out in May and June. Celery root needs longer time to grow and likes a fertile soil.

In the past, celery was grown as a vegetable for winter and early spring. It was perceived as a cleansing tonic. It is used in some weight-loss diets where it provides low-calorie fibers.

Celery is also grown for its seeds. The volatile oil is used in the perfume and pharmaceutical industries. Celery seeds, whole or ground, can be used to season dishes.

Cucumber

Main article Cucumber
Komkommer plant.jpg

The cucumber originates in India but is now grown around the world. Depending on the cultivar you can grow them in a greenhouse, a cold frame or outside. In April you can sow inside, in May until June 21 also outside.

Cucumbers like humus-rich soil and ample compost. A temperature of 70 F (21 C) when the plant grows up gives stronger plants and better results.

Most varieties have seeds. Male and female flowers grow at the same plant and pollination is required. Professional growers bring hives with honey bees to the fields. If you have too few insects in your own garden you can grow bee plants or spray sugar water to attract them.

Water the plants well. Cucumbers need much water and in dry circumstances the fruits get bitter.

Squeeze off the top after the fourth leaf and the branches again after the third leaf. This stimulates the plant to give more fruits. Harvest them when they are young. This stimulates the plant to form new flowers.

Endive

Main article Endive
Endive - pubdom.jpg

Endive is a member of the chicory genus, of which the leaves are often bitter. You can sow them in March under glass and plant them out in May, or sow outside after June 21 for winter harvest. During the first month of growth, endive should not be exposed to temperatures below 50 F (10 C) or the plants will soon make flowers instead of nice green heads. Seeds sown after June 21 won't make flowers anymore.

The green leaves are rich in vitamin A and C and minerals and can be cooked or used raw in salads. Some gardeners bleach the center leaves by putting a flower pot upside down on the plants a few weeks before harvesting.

Let one or two plants stand to make flowers. You cannot eat these plants but the blue flowers are beautiful.

Fava bean

Main article Fava bean
Tuinboon bontbloeiend.jpg

Sow fava beans (also called broad beans) in February and March. You can also sow under glass already in late autumn or January. Fava beans can overwinter.

Don't add manure to the soil but some old compost is ok, or sawdust to prevent the beans from rotting. Sow some dill in the same row, they protect against blackfly. Another method against blackfly is to pinch out the tops when the plant begins to blossom. You can stir-fry these tops and they are delicious.

Plant distance in the row 15 cm and between the rows 60 cm. Harvest is from mid June to July. You can grow lettuce between the beans when they are still small.

Fava beans grow in any soil but prefer rich loams. As a legume, they live in a symbiosis with Rhizobium, soil bacteria that fix nitrogen.

Broad beans are an old vegetable and were already eaten in the Mediterranean around 6000 BCE or earlier. Fava beans are often flavored with savory.

Gherkin

Main article Gherkin
ARS cucumber.jpg

Gherkins and commercial cucumbers belong to the same species (Cucumis sativus), but are from different cultivar groups.

You sow gherkins in May and June. Sow in a cold frame, in pots or in a greenhouse, or outside from the end of May. Sow 3 seeds together and keep the strongest. Gherkins needs full sun and a humus-rich fertile soil.

Pinch off the top above the fourth leaf and from the side branches the tops after the third leaves. This increases the production of fruits.

Make sure that pollination takes place, normally by bees. You can spray sugar water to attract bees. You can also use a brush to bring pollen from the male flowers into the female ones.

Harvest is from July to October. By harvesting the young gherkins the plants will produce more fruits. You can conserve gherkins in vinegar and add sugar, honey and various herbs.

Kale

Main article Kale
Kale 111221.JPG

Kale was one of the most common vegetables in Europe already before the Middle Ages. Some varieties existed in ancient Greece.

Kale is an easy crop to cultivate and grows on most every soil. Sow preferably in April, not later than the end of June. You can sow in a row, or in pots, and plant out later.

Kale can tolerate shade quite well. You can plant them between crops that are going to be harvested in the summer. By the time that the kale plants get bigger, the other crops will be gone.

Kale tastes best when frost has been over it. If you harvest before it froze outside, you can freeze kale in the freezer. Kale usually withstands the hardest winters, although some leaves may be damaged by stronger frost. Kale grows out again in early spring until it begins to blossom around April. Let the plants flower for some time; bees like it.

Kale is very high in a number of vitamins, among them vitamin C. and is reasonably rich in calcium. Kale, contains sulforaphane, a chemical with potent anti-cancer properties. Boiling decreases the level of sulforaphane[1]; however, steaming, microwaving, or stir frying do not result in significant loss.[2]


Leek

Main article Leek
Summer leek 120618 (9).JPG

Leek, according to some researchers, was already part of the the Egyptian and Mesopotamian diet at least from the 2nd millennium BCE onwards.

Fertilize your soil well with compost. Sow summer leek plants from January to April inside in pots or in a row in greenhouse or in a cold frame. Sow winter leek from March to the first half of May in the same way. You can also sow directly in the soil, this gives you less trouble with the leek fly.

Transplant when the plants are as thick as a pencil. Make trenches of 20 cm deep and plant leek in these trenches. You can also plant in holes made with the backside of the stick of one of your garden tools. You can hill up the plants as they grow but prevent soil from coming between the leaves.

You can also plant them in a normal way, that is not in trenches or holes. I did this with the summer leek shown in the photo.

You can harvest summer leek from June to the end of autumn and winter leek from early autumn until the next spring. The winter leek species are hardy.

List

  1. Leek
  2. Lettuce
  3. Onion
  4. Parsley
  5. Parsnip
  6. Pea
  7. Potato
  8. Pumpkin
  9. Radish
  10. Red cabbage
  11. Rhubarb
  12. Turnip
  13. White cabbage
  14. Zucchini

What to include for each crop

This is for myself, JE
  1. Name (in link)
  2. When to sow or plant
  3. How to sow or plant
  4. Soil
  5. Fertilizers
  6. Other conditions
  7. Comments

References

Comments