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Preventative Medicine For Your Vegetable Garden


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The expression "prevention is the best medicine" certainly applies to gardening, especially to vegetable gardening, where a few minor problems can quickly grow large enough to ruin your entire crop. Once your garden is in and growing, performing the following maintenance tasks will keep garden problems to a minimum.

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Patrol for Signs of Trouble

In gardening, what you don't know can hurt you. Get in the habit of taking daily walks around your garden. Not only will you learn to notice and appreciate the subtle changes occurring in your plants as they grow, but you'll learn to spot signs of trouble early, before they escalate into major problems.

Keep Plants Watered

When and how much to water and how much your garden needs depends on a lot of factors: local weather, the type of crops you're growing, each crop's stage of development, soil drainage, etc. As a general rule, crops growing in early to mid summer should receive at least 1 inch of water per week. This can come from rainfall, irrigation systems, or a combination of both. From mid to late summer, as temperature rise and plants grow larger in size, you may find that those same crops need even more water.

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Keep Plants Fed

If you start your plants in nutrient-rich soil (amended with lots of compost), your crops will probably not need additional feeding during the growing season. Too much fertilizer can be as detrimental to vegetables as not enough. Crops that can usually get by with less fertilizer include beans, peas, radishes, watermelons, and turnips. Crops that tend to be heavy feeders, which may need supplemental nutrients in poorer soil include members of the cabbage family, tomatoes, sweet corn, beets, carrots, onions, celery, and potatoes. A pre-season soil test is really the only way to know for sure if you're coping with nutrient deficiencies. If your plants need a quick boost, consider top dressing the soil with compost or using compost tea.

Here are some basic signs to watch for:

  • Low Nitrogen (N) = Yellowing of older leaves; slow growth; small leaves.
  • Low Phosphorus (P) = Dark, blue-green leaves; red or purple leaf veins; slow growth.
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  • Low Potassium (K) = Margins of lower leaves look yellow/brown; slow growth.

Stay Ahead of Weeds

Remove weeds while they are small. This prevents them from establishing deep root systems and keeps them from going to seed. Small frequent weeding sessions make will make the task seem more manageable.

Mulch as Needed

Over time, any mulch added near the start of the season will naturally start to decompose and release nutrients back into the soil. Add new mulch as needed to suppress weeds, keep the soil cool, help retain moisture, and keep your garden looking attractive.

Prune, Stake, and Train

As garden crops grow and start to bear fruit, make sure to provide them with adequate support. Redirect stems while they're still small to keep them inside cages and on trellises. Use coffee cans, nylon slings, or wood scraps to elevate squash and melons off the ground. This will keep them clean and dry (help prevent rotting), protect them from animals, and allow them to develop a uniform shape.

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Thin Your Crops

Crops sown from seed should be thinned as soon as seedlings are big enough to handle. Some crops, especially root crops like carrots, beets, radishes, and turnips, may need thinning more than once depending on their stage of development. Look on the back of your seed packets to find out the recommended spacing for each crop.

Hill Up Your Soil

If you planted potatoes, you need to continue hilling up soil around your plants as they grow. This encourages them to produce long stems and more potatoes. It also keeps developing potatoes from being exposed to light. Use soil or mulch to keep hills mounded up at least 12 inches high.

Battle Birds And Bugs

If birds and bugs have been a problem in the past, use netting or row covers over your crops to prevent further damage. If you see insects or spot early signs of insect damage, use a garden insect guide to correctly diagnose the bug and the problem before you take action. This is important for two reasons:

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  1. Different insects can cause similar types of damage, but require very different methods of treatment.

  2. It's easy to kill the wrong bug. Some garden insects are beneficial and the insect you see may not be the insect that caused the damage.

Stay on Top of Harvests

There are no absolute rules when it comes to harvesting your vegetables, but in general, the best flavor is usually captured when crops are harvested just prior to reaching maturity. If you're going to be away from home when some of your crops near maturity, arrange for a friend or neighbor to do the harvesting for you in exchange for a portion of the crop.

Take Notes

Don't forget to record what is happening in your garden throughout the season. Write down planting, germination, flowering, and harvest dates; the type of bugs you see, weather conditions, crop yields, etc. Jotting down a sentence or two each day will help you repeat successes and avoid failures again next year.

Young girl gardening.
 
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About The Author: Ellen Brown is an environmental writer and photographer and the owner of Sustainable Media, an environmental media company that specializes in helping businesses and organizations promote eco-friendly products and services.

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Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 231 Feedbacks
August 13, 20090 found this helpful
Top Comment

Great advice. I'm just getting into the whole vegetable garden concept and there is a learning curve! One big lesson is to not be afraid of moving things around to stake them, as they will thrive more for the effort.

Here's more fun on vegetable gardens.
www.oldhouseweb.com/.../751.shtml

 
August 23, 20090 found this helpful

Hello Ellen, Can you tell me what the tiny holes in many of my only tall tomato plant could be and how to heal the plant before it takes over the whole plant?

 

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