5 Transplanting Tips To Guarantee Your Garden Thrives

 

5 Transplanting Tips To Guarantee Your Garden Thrives

gardening-sustaining-1-nixa-lawn-serviceDOTcom-400x266

It’s almost June, and our greenhouse is exploding. Last fall we saved seeds from our heirloom flowers and veggies, started them in March, and now it’s time to transplant them from their home in the greenhouse to the raised beds outside, and boy are they ready.
Our nights are warmer, finally, bottoming out in the mid-50s, the perfect time to put all my baby plants into their permanent homes. After 3 years of trial and error, this is what I learned about transplanting times and procedures:
1. Some plants can go outside early.

Veggies like snap peas, broccoli, onions, carrots, leeks, lettuce and potatoes can go in the garden while the nights are in the 30s, and most of these can even handle a soft frost. Carrots, radishes, lettuce, and leek seeds can go straight to the garden, but onions, green beans, broccoli and snap peas need to be started early in the greenhouse here in northern Illinois.

Otherwise, by the time these veggies start growing produce the weather is so hot that the plants shoot up and the fruit suffers. With broccoli, beans and peas, you will have a very short season. Our first year, we planted seeds directly into the raised beds, and the broccoli never even produced a head, and we only got a few weeks of beans and peas before it got too hot for them.

Other plants shouldn’t go out until the ground temperature stays above 55 degrees. Tomatoes will just stop growing if you put them in cold ground. Melons can and should be started in the greenhouse, and planted outside when the ground stays above that magic 55 degrees.
2. Plant vertical on the north side of your garden.
Climbing plants like snap peas, cucumbers, and green beans can be put in the north end of your garden using lattice, fencing, or even hog panels for them to climb on. This keeps all your veggies in the same space, and for those of you with small areas to plant, this is a great space-saving technique…..More Here

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2016 Hiram's 1555 Blog

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.