ICC Master Gardener display garden in 2018 |
This year I added a terraced raised bed
garden where I am growing most of my vegetable crops. It is allows me to
grow a lot of food in a smaller space, while also looking good. If you don’t
have space for a large row garden or just want to try something different, here
are some other options to try.
Container herbs on 5-13-2020 |
One trend right now is growing vegetables
in raised beds and containers. Container vegetable gardens are particularly
popular with gardeners who have little or no ground space. Containers may be
located almost anywhere and can be both decorative and harvestable. Popular
choices for container gardens include attractive pots of kitchen herbs, hanging
baskets of ripe red tomatoes, and window boxes of bright leaf lettuce or fresh
radishes.
'Mighty Mini' aerogarden tomatoes |
Dwarf vegetable varieties work
particularly well in containers. For example, there are many different types of
dwarf tomatoes that produce fruit in small spaces. Most dwarf tomatoes have
determinate growth habits (see definitions at bottom of page). I have had success in the past growing ‘Bush Goliath’ tomato in a container. It is a two to three-foot-tall
plant with 3 to 4-inch, sweet tomatoes. I have also grown ‘Mighty Mini’ cherry tomatoes in my indoor aerogarden. Considered by many to be the smallest tomato plant, it
grows only five to six inches tall, producing sweet salad tomatoes. By the way, the trick to growing tomatoes indoors is good light and pollinating
flowers by hand.
If you don’t have a container you can actually
garden right in the potting mix bags. Purchase potting soil bags at your local
nursery or garden center, and cut a few drainage holes in the back side of each
bag. Lay the bags flat on the ground, and then cut holes in the top of the bags
to make room for the plants. Use a hose to moisten the potting mix, and then
add plants. This makes a quick and easy vegetable garden.
Watermelon in 2013 at Washington Community Garden |
25-foot indeterminate tomato at Dixon Springs Ag |
Definitions
Determinate and Indeterminate tomato growth
habits. Determinate varieties set fruit at the ends
of their branches on terminal buds. Once buds are set they stop growing in
height, so these plants need little or no staking and generally have a short
harvest period. Indeterminate varieties continue to grow and produce leaves and
flowers until the first frost and require staking and pruning.
Tomato label terminology. Look for label terms that indicate a tomato plant’s resistance to
various diseases: A for alternaria
disease resistance, F-fusarium, N-nematodes, T-tobacco mosaic virus, and V-verticillium. This does not mean they are
immune to the disease, but rather that
they are less likely to get that disease. Also, be sure to rotate your crop for
better disease management.
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