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Monday, April 19, 2010

Time to Plant!

Time to plant!
As soon as you can work the soil, you can plant. And that could be as early as this weekend if your soil is ready. If not, have your planting plan and compost ready so that you can get started at the first opportunity.

Plant some color

Nothing says spring like pansies. As long as they are hardened off (accustomed to being outside) and covered up when temps are below freezing, they can be planted in pots or in the ground. Overnight, place pots where they are protected and in temps below 32 degrees, cover pansies with fabric (not plastic).

Veggies--maximize production by sequencing
For most veggie yield, set aside one area of the garden that will have three successive crops you will be harvesting from late April into September. This area of the garden won't have tomatoes or cucumbers or pumpkins that require dedicated space for a long growing season.

Your "sequencing" garden will have series of three different crops that are planted and harvested three successive times. Plant an early season crop followed by a warmer season crop and a final repeat of the cool season crop.

The key to this rotation is in the variety of plants selected. Look for varieties of each vegetable that require the fewest days from planting to maturity. For example, iceberg lettuce generally takes 60 days from planting til harvest. But bibb lettuce can be picked in 46 days and thinned to pick as "baby bibb" at about 28 days. To get three successive plantings, bibb is the better choice because as soon as this crop has been harvested, you can start the next crop.

What to plant when

Crop #1 - Cool season veggies - plant mid-March
By selecting early-maturing varieties and depending on the weather, these veggies will have completed their cycle by around early May. A cooler spring may extend the standard days to maturity.

· Early lettuce, like bibb
· Radishes
· Spinach
· Carrotts
· Sugar snap peas or other peas that mature early


Crop #2 - Warm season veggies - plant early May
For the second crop, you may want to start from small plants rather than seeds. When they have matured and been harvested, there will still be time for one more crop.

· Broccoli
· Cauliflower
· Small cabbage
· Peas

Crop #3 - Cool season veggies - plant mid-July
Repeat your favorites from Crop #1 and also add green onions and early maturing snap beans. Even though you plant in July when it's hot, cooler days and especially, cooler nights are just around the corner in August. This last crop should thrive in these conditions and give one last harvest before the fall frost.


Photos courtesy Burpee Seed.

Tip of the Week reprinted courtesy of Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado (ALCC) of which Foothills Landscape Maintenance, LLC is a member. ALCC is the only only professional organization for Colorado's landscape contracting industry statewide.
Tip of the Week is copyrighted by Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado and may be forwarded or copied by its members provided proper credit is given to ALCC.

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