Advertisement
Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation

PLANTWISE

Get Dirty

Get Out and Plant Your Veggies!

beans, squash, and cukes – oh my!

Email
Tomatoes_

We’re a ways away from eating them but it’s just about time to plant ’em

Yup, it’s time – or darn near time – to start planting your summer vegetable garden.

Right now, you can direct-sow carrots, beets, celery, radishes, and greens like lettuce and spinach.

Starting this weekend, if your soil is consistently 65F or more, you can also direct-sow beans and maybe squash, pumpkins and cucumbers if you have a nice, warm spot. If your garden’s like mine (a little on the cool side), wait a week. There’s nothing worse than waiting for little seeds to sprout and then discovering they’ve rotted.

We’re right on the cusp of being able to plant basil, cucumbers and tomato starts. It’s been chilly lately but if you have an extra-warm spot near a wall or surrounded by concrete (=reflected heat) or use plastic mulch or tents, you should be fine. I just wait ’cause I hate seeing my plants sit and do nothing at first.

Now’s also a good time to set up a Wall-O-Water, Cozy-Kote or plastic mulch for a few days to warm the ground ahead of time for eggplants, peppers, and melons. These plants require soil temperatures to be consistently above 70F to really take off. Get that soil thermometer (about $10-15 at Portland Nursery) and check. (It’s good to keep a soil thermometer handy in the veg garden year-round, anyway.) My garden soil’s still at 64F (oops, typo – it was 54F) – not quite ready. But we’re getting there, folks. If your veg garden receives loads of reflected heat or you have a plastic greenhouse cover or a little hoop-house, your soil temperatures could be nearing 70F and you can soon get started with the more tender stuff.

Sweet corn germinates at soil temperatures over 65F but I would still wait a bit. The super-sweet types need soil to be even warmer. Locals usually plant regular sweet corn around June 1.

So do wait a couple more weeks to plant out starts of peppers, eggplants, and melons, unless you have had your soil-warming plastic tents or mulches up for a while and the soil’s above 70F. These are really hot-weather crops and will just sit and sulk if it isn’t warm enough.

So there you go – your work’s cut out for you. Get planting!

Tags: Vegetables

 

Comments Speech Bubble

By Loree / danger garden on May 17, 2010 at 8:39PM

I fell for a beautiful basil plant at Fred Meyer today….so many huge leaves and only $4.99. I will start more plants from seed as soon as it’s a bit warmer but I couldn’t resist the intoxicating smell! How about a picture of your veggie garden?

By kate on May 17, 2010 at 9:36PM

Yup, I know what you mean about the scent of basil – to smell it is to want (to eat) it.

I sneak photos of my garden in to my posts all the time but heck, it’s been a while since I’ve pictured my vege garden. Next time I write about veges, I’ll make sure to show it. Hopefully the mache will be finished spawning by then – right now, my vege garden is pretty much a sea of teeny white flowers – pretty much smothering everything under 18" tall!

Add a Comment Speech Bubble

We retain the right to remove comments containing personal attacks or excessive profanity, and comments unrelated to the editorial content.

Help us fight spam. Please type the words below to submit your comment.

Advertisement