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Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    Rotating Vegetable Crops for Garden Success

    Lobo
    Lobo
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    Posts : 28411
    Join date : 2013-01-12

    Rotating Vegetable Crops for Garden Success Empty Rotating Vegetable Crops for Garden Success

    Post by Lobo Sun 21 Jun 2015, 3:59 pm

    [size=33]Rotating Vegetable Crops for Garden Success[/size]
    Rotating Vegetable Crops for Garden Success Tomato-rotate-crops
    This vegetable garden includes onions, tomatoes, and peppers in the foreground, squash toward the back, and beans along the edge. Next year, these crops will be rotated so that plants of the same family aren’t grown in the same spot two years in a row.

    To keep the vegetable garden healthy, avoid repeating the same planting plan in the same spot. This practice, calledcrop rotation, can feel a bit like juggling, but it’s important to prevent crop-specific pests and diseases from building up and carrying over from one season to the next in the soil. If you move the crop, the problem has no host on which to live. Ideally, rotate a vegetable (or vegetable family) so it grows in a particular spot only one year out of three.
    Rotating vegetable crops is an easy juggle in large vegetable gardens. Rearranging small gardens can be more challenging, but even minimal rotation will make a big difference. In a raised bed, if you use a planting mix that is changed out every two or three years, crop rotation is less important.
    Start by making a rough sketch of the garden as you plant and date the sketch in your garden journal. Nothing fancy, “X marks the spot” will do. Note each planting of the year if you make successive plantings in spring, summer, and fall. Sketches in your garden journal remind you how you planted the garden last year so you won’t follow the exact same plan this year.
    Putting your garden rotation on paper also lets you plan ahead to know how many plants of each type you need. If you note the variety name, such as “Bonnie Original Tomato,” instead of just “Tomato,” you’ll have a record in case you can’t remember the name of your favorite tomato.
    Rotate by Vegetable Plant Families
    Vegetables that are members of the same botanical family are susceptible to the same problems, so try to follow members of one family with members of a different family.  For example, plant tomatoes in the spot where the beans grew last year, the squash in the spot where peas grew, etc.
    Rotating Vegetable Crops for Garden Success Green-beans-garden-225x300
    Beans and peas enrich the soil. A good gardening practice is to follow beans or peas with leafy greens such as cabbage or kale, which love the nitrogen left behind by their predecessors.

    The Tomato Family The tomato family includes tomatoeseggplantpeppers, and potatoes. These are heavy feeders and are best planted in enriched soil. Tomato Family members also are often affected by the same diseases. Never follow tomatoes after potatoes because deadly late blight can overwinter in potatoes that might have been missed and remain in the soil.
    The Bean Family  These crops enrich the soil by adding a little nitrogen. This group includes green beansgreen peas, southern peas, jicama, and peanuts, as well as clover and vetch used as cover crops in the cool season.
    The Squash Family  Squash family members are heavy feeders that grow best in rich soil. They include summer and winter squashpumpkins, gourds,cucumbers, and melons (including cantaloupe and watermelon).
    The Cabbage Family These leafy greens thrive on nitrogen-rich soil. Plant them where a member of the bean family has grown before. Members includecabbagebroccolicauliflowerkalecollards, and turnip greens.
    Crop rotation is not as complicated as it sounds, especially if you take the time to sketch a garden plan and refer to the list of families. The benefits are definitely worth the effort!

      Current date/time is Fri 19 Apr 2024, 1:02 am