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Grow Greens Year-Round With Below-Grade Trench Planting
Step 4: Prepare The Base Soil For Planting When you finish digging the site for your below-grade trench planting, you'll find you've left the best soil in a pile to the side of your trench.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Winter Gardening: What You Can Expect
Any sort of outdoor row cover you have over crops might freeze as well, smothering your plants or making it difficult to remove. It is in those moments of winter that the farmer really must think about how his or her crops are handing the excessive heat.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
3 Ways Of Overwintering Artichokes In Cold Climates
Growing artichokes in the north is not the challenge many gardeners believe it to be. Though they may not be a large, these secondary chokes are also delicious. They'll shift into dormancy and can be moved back outdoors when the danger of frost has passed...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Winter Gardening: 3 Ways To Have Radishes For Christmas Dinner
We raise and prepare our own turkeys, cook our stored sweet potatoes and eat our own frozen heirloom corn. On particularly cold days, cover the pot with a tent of clear plastic sheeting, and if you live where it's very cold, keep the pot next to a window...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Build A Raised Bed High Tunnel To Extend The Harvest
Jessica Walliser Step 5: Add Vertical Center Support The next step in building a raised bed high tunnel is to add a center support to the arches. Jessica Walliser 6 one- or two-hole strap brackets 6-12 wood screws 8-10 plastic zip ties (6-8 inches long)...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
7 Steps to the Easiest Cold Frame You\'ll Ever Make
Step 4 Using wood or PVC piping, construct a central roof-line support across the middle of the block frame so that it sits just on top of the cement blocks. Step 5 Shovel 6 to 8 inches of horse, poultry or cow manure into the framed bed, then cover it...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
7 Winter Activities to Improve Your Garden
Heading into spring with business goals will help guide you through the hustle and bustle while keeping your eye on the prize. Without a cover crop , the soil will be left bare and vulnerable.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Turning the Page: Autumnal Equinox
Where did summer go? So, grab the camera, hop in the car, and go out and take some pictures! Thecan be breathtaking. As much as I liked summer, I am a bit tired. And I don't want one more mosquito bite while taking photographs outdoors.
California
El Segundo
Why You Should Plant More Cucumbers In Early July
A late crop of cukes might be better pollinated. Four-lined plant bugs, flea beetles and several other vegetable pests are far less problematic in the late summer than they are in the spring.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Build a Cold Frame from a Storm Door
Step 6 Cut the intermediate dividers (I) to fit snugly between the front and back of the box, using the 6-foot 2×10. Because sizes can vary, I don't provide exact dimensions here.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
How to Delay Bolting of Your Spring Greens
Just remember to remove the covering for at least 8 hours per day to allow enough sunlight to reach the plants. Pick the Right Varieties You can also delay bolting by making sure you choose the correct cultivars of all the cool-season greens you plant...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
How To Keep Growing Poinsettias After Christmas
Be sure to keep you poinsettia away from cold drafts. While the plant is still in bloom, fertilize every three weeks with an organic, water-soluble liquid fertilizer. Allow the plant to continue to grow until all the bracts naturally drop in late winter.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
4 Tips to Keep your Garden Producing Into Fall
Work 2 to 3 inches of compost, leaf mold, or well-aged horse or cow manure into the soil before planting. « More Dirt on Gardening » Tags Lists , succession planting Although many of us think of spring as prime planting season, mid to late summer is...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
How to Propagate Succulents: 2 Techniques for Success
You can hold the leaf in place by pinning it to the soil with a few pieces of wire bended to make a hairpin shape (stick it right down through the leaf), or by tucking the entire margin of the leaf down into the soil just a little bit.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Ag Bites: Make The Most Of Your Garden Hoop House, Year-Round
At Twin Oaks Community, it takes four people about one hour to put on a shade cloth and 30 to 40 minutes to take it off. Grow Cover Crops “You can help to improve the organic matter in your soil, and if you're unfortunate enough to have weeds in there,...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
6 Household Items You Can Upcycle for the Garden
Old Shoes for Planters Turn that favorite pair of boots or shoes into unique containers. Secure it by pounding two 36-inch pieces of rebar 10 inches deep at each end of the springs, then set the springs upright against them, and attach them to the rebar...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
3 Ways to Start the Spring Garden with Cold Frames
Two weeks before your last-frost date, your cool-season vegetables will be able to survive on their own outdoors. Ventilate: Ventilation is required to remove moisture and prevent disease, as well as regulate temperature.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
The Best Squash And Pumpkin Varieties For Storage
Hailing from Australia, the fruits of Traimble are three lobed. Consider these delicious and tough-as-nails squash and pumpkin varieties for storage. The rind is a lovely slate blue or deep green, and the interior flesh is smooth and creamy.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
4 Reasons Your Greenhouse Tomatoes Are Failing
Treat your tomatoes well when you plant them in a greenhouse, hoop house or high tunnel for a year-round tomato crop. “All varieties are indeterminate so that they can produce over a long harvest season.” Instead, Try: Snyder says the most widely...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Fruits and Vegetables - Planting and Eating With the Season
Crops and harvest dates all depend on the specific climate region. Space seeds properly in sections of which plants require what amounts of water. However, it may take another month before plants can be transplanted outdoors and proper soil temperature...
California
El Segundo
5 Simple Steps to Build Low Tunnels
Weigh down the edges and ends with rocks or bricks to form a secure, closed tunnel. Step 5 Cover the hoop frame with heavy-weight floating row cover or plastic. Cut the pipe to the proper lengths.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
11 Crops to Plant This Fall
Rhubarb takes a few years to get established, and fall planting lets the harvest begin a year earlier than otherwise. Radishes Radishes are famous for their speedy growth—as few as four weeks from planting to harvest for some varieties.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Growing Brambles in High Tunnels
Also, because the brambles are sheltered from the rain, using tunnels requires that the grower have a relatively large source of water and an efficient irrigation system. Since about the early 2000s, farmers have tried planting berries in high tunnels,...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Our Favorite Garden Season Extenders
Grow Span Cold Frame/Hoop House Billtacular/Flickr No season-extender list would be complete without mentioning a hoop house. When the weather warms, simply pull the hoops out of the soil and stack them for compact storage.
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Pests and High Tunnels
If you're a high-tunnel rookie, consider starting with these easier-to-grow, warmth-loving plants as recommended by Goldy: cucumbers, okra, basil, leafy greens and raspberries . Some farmers, particularly those in northern climes where the growing season...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Cool Weather Annuals for Winter
Just because we're in the middle of winter, doesn't mean we can't start planning for our spring crops. Spinach is a consistent performer in the cold weather vegetable garden fall through early summer in the south, and performs best with an early start...
California
El Segundo
Overwintering Root Vegetables: 3 Methods For Success
2: Build A Straw Bale “Topper” Over The Area This method works best if your root crops are planted in a block, rather than in a row. If you live where winters get very cold, say Minnesota, this technique probably won't allow your root crops to survive...
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia