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Gardening

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gunghorjc

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So I was thinking of giving gardening a try for the first time this summer. It'd be a vegetable garden, and I'm thinking things like carrots, green beans, corn, etc.

Anyone know of any resources that'll be good for a beginner to read? Or vegetables that are easier for a newbie gardener to grow?

Thanks! God bless. :)
 
they will cost you friendships .... LOL They are an easy grower and they grow! you cant give them away fast enough. You go check the plant, the zuccinni are the size of your thumb in the morning they look like your arm! :yes

Tomatoes are good they really taste different then store bought
 
Oh I see, they yield a lot! To be honest, I'm not sure if I've even ever ate zucchini, besides zucchini bread. :lol

Oh and how did I forget tomatoes! Thanks for reminding me so I can add that to my list of vegetables to grow! :thumbsup

That gets me thinking though... are tomatoes a vegetabe or a fruit? I remember hearing before that vegetables grow under the ground and fruit above ground, but that there's a few exceptions. :chin
 
So I was thinking of giving gardening a try for the first time this summer. It'd be a vegetable garden, and I'm thinking things like carrots, green beans, corn, etc.

Anyone know of any resources that'll be good for a beginner to read? Or vegetables that are easier for a newbie gardener to grow?

Thanks! God bless. :)

My wife has the green thumb. That being said, we usually grow these vegetables:

lettuce, tomatoes, onions, peppers, zucchini, cucumbers and sometimes other vine stuff for decorations, e.g. pumpkin and gourd.

She also has strawberries.

Basically, my wife buys the plants already sprouted for transplanting from your home improvement or other such place that sells plants. After we rototill and add in some fertilizer, we simply plant these little guys and just water them to grow. We never start from a seed. Each plant should come with instructions as to what to do and how to plant it.

To keep the weeds down, we have somewhat success with laying newspaper with grass clippings over it between the rows, but weeds are always a problem and you will have them unless you have a lot of time to spare weeding (which we don't).

Generally tomatoes and the vine plants do best. Peppers moderately well as with the others generally grow moderately well.

Our soil has a lot of clay and iron in so it has to be balanced for PH and nutrients that each plant needs, but we have relatively good success without being overly crazy about it.

Most importantly, fence it off from pests such as groundhogs. We use about 100' of snow fencing to fence off a square area. Also, we have outdoor cats that help keep the little bunnies down that might try to squeeze between the fence.
 
Ooh, cucumbers, another good one I didn't think about! Thanks tim for the suggestions! I'm thinking I want to give the growing of the vegetable plants from seeds a try first.
 
Might just be my area (Northeast USA) but my mother has a hard time with tomatoes. There is some nasty sickness that they can get really easily and once one of them gets it they all get it. She ended up planting each tomato in its own container and keeping them spread apart so that they didn't spread the sickness if one of them got it.

And pumpkins are wicked easy. Just be careful. We threw an old pumpkin (from Halloween) into compost and then the next year we had a pumpkin patch!!!
 
Ooh, cucumbers, another good one I didn't think about! Thanks tim for the suggestions! I'm thinking I want to give the growing of the vegetable plants from seeds a try first.

You can try that, but then be patient with yourself as not all the seeds will sprout, or if they do, they may die. I know my wife plants gourds and pumpkins (and I believe the other vine plants) from seeds, but the tomatoes, peppers, lettuce are already little plant tykes and even then, some years we almost lose half of our pepper plants they are very delicate.

If you have time to take care of them, then I say go for it!
 
Might just be my area (Northeast USA) but my mother has a hard time with tomatoes. There is some nasty sickness that they can get really easily and once one of them gets it they all get it. She ended up planting each tomato in its own container and keeping them spread apart so that they didn't spread the sickness if one of them got it.

And pumpkins are wicked easy. Just be careful. We threw an old pumpkin (from Halloween) into compost and then the next year we had a pumpkin patch!!!

I live in the same area and some years our tomatoes have the same problem. Sometimes they have that black rot (I forget what it's called) from too much moisture, but tomatoes produce like crazy and make up for the bad ones.

Yeah, the vine plants like pumpkins do have a tendency to do that. But for us, after an initial good start, they only flourish so much as they don't like to be penned in. Back in the days (before the groundhogs discovered our garden) when we had it unpenned, those vines would grow forever and yield large pumpkins and would actually take over the rest of the garden. You have to watch them.
 
I am a fan of Gardening. Being where I currently live I really only get a little over a half day of sun between 2 cramped mobile homes but make due with most things. Things I currently have planted which come back every year are, Red Raspberries, 2 Rhubarb plants (which were already there when I moved in), Chives, 2 Goji Berry plants, 3 Nanking Cherry bushes which produced flowers for the first time since I planted them about 2 years ago, might have Cherries this year! Strawberry plants I planted a few years ago. I usually plant Tomatoes, sweet and hot peppers too. I have some Snow Peas currently growing which are coming back from last year, some of the pods must have made it into the ground all on their own last year.
 
If you are cramped for space try, "Vertical gardening". There are books on it and I have a couple of them. I have successfully grown Squash, Zucchini around vertical poles even up onto the roof! You would be amazed how tall they will get when you prune the side runners off. You can train them to grow along a fence also and they will go some distance.
 
I also grow some veggies in containers on the deck mostly so even if the neighborhood kids end up picking everything in the ground garden I still have stuff up on the deck. One year I caught 5 of them getting ready to pick all my Raspberries. One time they picked all of the neighbor's Tomatoes behind me. He was so mad he was out there cussing in English & Spanish and fired his gun off up into the air 3 times, lol.
 
My mother used to grow tomatoes but she got tired of doing it and we stick to fairy gardens now which is just as well considering the fact I don't even like tomatoes anyway. The deer sure did though. They kept trying to eat her tomatoes which is why she had to build a fence around them that we now use as the fairy garden area. We learned that when deer get hungry enough they'll basically eat anything they can get ahold of. :lol
 
Almost forgot, my Aronia berry plant is doing great. I had originally ordered 2 but one had died when small in the pot. The other I planted in partial shade since I read the do not need full Sun. It seems to be growing like gangbusters now.
 
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