Gardening
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Cultivating
Vegetables
As a rule, we choose
to grow bush beans rather than
pole beans. I cannot make up my
mind whether or not this is from
sheer laziness. In a city
backyard the tall varieties might
perhaps be a problem since it
would be difficult to get poles.
But these running beans can be
trained along old fences and with
little urging will run up the
stalks of the tallest sunflowers.
So that settles the pole
question. There is an ornamental
side to the bean question.
Suppose you plant these tall
beans at the extreme rear end of
each vegetable row. Make arches
with supple tree limbs, binding
them over to form the arch. Train
the beans over these. When one
stands facing the garden, what a
beautiful terminus these bean
arches make.
Beans like rich, warm, sandy
soil. In order to assist the soil
be sure to dig deeply, and work
it over thoroughly for bean
culture. It never does to plant
beans before the world has warmed
up from its spring chills. There
is another advantage in early
digging of soil. It brings to the
surface eggs and larvae of
insects. The birds eager for food
will even follow the plough to
pick from the soil these choice
morsels. A little lime worked in
with the soil is helpful in the
cultivation of beans.
Bush beans are planted in drills
about eighteen inches apart,
while the pole-bean rows should
be three feet apart. The drills
for the bush limas should be
further apart than those for the
other dwarf beans say three feet.
This amount of space gives
opportunity for cultivation with
the hoe. If the running beans
climb too high just pinch off the
growing extreme end, and this
will hold back the upward growth.
Among bush beans are the dwarf,
snap or string beans, the wax
beans, the bush limas, one
variety of which is known as
brittle beans. Among the pole
beans are the pole limas, wax and
scarlet runner. The scarlet
runner is a beauty for decorative
effects. The flowers are scarlet
and are fine against an old
fence. These are quite lovely in
the flower garden. Where one
wishes a vine, this is good to
plant for one gets both a
vegetable, bright flowers and a
screen from the one plant. When
planting beans put the bean in
the soil edgewise with the eye
down.
Beets like rich, sandy loam,
also. Fresh manure worked into
the soil is fatal for beets, as
it is for many another crop. But
we will suppose that nothing is
available but fresh manure. Some
gardeners say to work this into
the soil with great care and
thoroughness. But even so, there
is danger of a particle of it
getting next to a tender beet
root. The following can be done;
Dig a trench about a foot deep,
spread a thin layer of manure in
this, cover it with soil, and
plant above this. By the time the
main root strikes down to the
manure layer, there will be
little harm done. Beets should
not be transplanted. If the rows
are one foot apart there is ample
space for cultivation. Whenever
the weather is really settled,
then these seeds may be planted.
Young beet tops make fine greens.
Greater care should be taken in
handling beets than usually is
shown. When beets are to be
boiled, if the tip of the root
and the tops are cut off, the
beet bleeds. This means a loss of
good material. Pinching off such
parts with the fingers and doing
this not too closely to the beet
itself is the proper method of
handling.
There are big coarse members of
the beet and cabbage families
called the mangel wurzel and ruta
baga. About here these are raised
to feed to the cattle. They are a
great addition to a cow's dinner.
The cabbage family is a large
one. There is the cabbage proper,
then cauliflower, broccoli or a
more hardy cauliflower, kale,
Brussels sprouts and kohlrabi, a
cabbage-turnip combination.
Cauliflower is a kind of refined,
high-toned cabbage relative. It
needs a little richer soil than
cabbage and cannot stand the
frost. A frequent watering with
manure water gives it the extra
richness and water it really
needs. The outer leaves must be
bent over, as in the case of the
young cabbage, in order to get
the white head. The dwarf
varieties are rather the best to
plant.
Kale is not quite so particular a
cousin. It can stand frost. Rich
soil is necessary, and early
spring planting, because of slow
maturing. It may be planted in
September for early spring work.
Brussels sprouts are a very
popular member of this family. On
account of their size many people
who do not like to serve poor,
common old cabbage will serve
these. Brussels sprouts are
interesting in their growth. The
plant stalk runs skyward. At the
top, umbrella like, is a close
head of leaves, but this is not
what we eat. Shaded by the
umbrella and packed all along the
stalk are delicious little
cabbages or sprouts. Like the
rest of the family a rich soil is
needed and plenty of water during
the growing period. The seed
should be planted in May, and the
little plants transplanted into
rich soil in late July. The rows
should be eighteen inches apart,
and the plants one foot apart in
the rows.
Kohlrabi is a go-between in the
families of cabbage and turnip.
It is sometimes called the
turnip-root cabbage. Just above
the ground the stem of this plant
swells into a turnip-like
vegetable. In the true turnip the
swelling is underground, but like
the cabbage, kohlrabi forms its
edible part above ground. It is
easy to grow. Only it should
develop rapidly, otherwise the
swelling gets woody, and so loses
its good quality. Sow out as
early as possible; or sow inside
in March and transplant to the
open. Plant in drills about two
feet apart. Set the plants about
one foot apart, or thin out to
this distance. To plant one
hundred feet of drill buy half an
ounce of seed. Seed goes a long
way, you see. Kohlrabi is served
and prepared like turnip. It is a
very satisfactory early crop.
Before leaving the cabbage family
I should like to say that the
cabbage called Savoy is an
excellent variety to try. It
should always have an early
planting under cover, say in
February, and then be
transplanted into open beds in
March or April. If the land is
poor where you are to grow
cabbage, then by all means choose
Savoy.
Carrots are of two general kinds:
those with long roots, and those
with short roots. If long-rooted
varieties are chosen, then the
soil must be worked down to a
depth of eighteen inches, surely.
The shorter ones will do well in
eight inches of well-worked sandy
soil. Do not put carrot seed into
freshly manured land. Another
point in carrot culture is one
concerning the thinning process.
As the little seedlings come up
you will doubtless find that they
are much, much too close
together. Wait a bit, thin a
little at a time, so that young,
tiny carrots may be used on the
home table. These are the points
to jot down about the culture of
carrots.
The cucumber is the next
vegetable in the line. This is a
plant from foreign lands. Some
think that the cucumber is really
a native of India. A light, sandy
and rich soil is needed I mean
rich in the sense of richness in
organic matter. When cucumbers
are grown outdoors, as we are
likely to grow them, they are
planted in hills. Nowadays, they
are grown in hothouses; they hang
from the roof, and are a
wonderful sight. In the
greenhouse a hive of bees is kept
so that cross-fertilization may
go on.
But if you intend to raise
cucumbers follow these
directions: Sow the seed inside,
cover with one inch of rich soil.
In a little space of six inches
diameter, plant six seeds. Place
like a bean seed with the
germinating end in the soil. When
all danger of frost is over, each
set of six little plants, soil
and all, should be planted in the
open. Later, when danger of
insect pests is over, thin out to
three plants in a hill. The hills
should be about four feet apart
on all sides.
Before the time of Christ,
lettuce was grown and served.
There is a wild lettuce from
which the cultivated probably
came. There are a number of
cultivated vegetables which have
wild ancestors, carrots, turnips
and lettuce being the most common
among them. Lettuce may be tucked
into the garden almost anywhere.
It is surely one of the most
decorative of vegetables. The
compact head, the green of the
leaves, the beauty of symmetry
all these are charming
characteristics of lettuces.
As the summer advances and as the
early sowings of lettuce get old
they tend to go to seed. Don't
let them. Pull them up. None of
us are likely to go into the
seed-producing side of lettuce.
What we are interested in is the
raising of tender lettuce all the
season. To have such lettuce in
mid and late summer is possible
only by frequent plantings of
seed. If seed is planted every
ten days or two weeks all summer,
you can have tender lettuce all
the season. When lettuce gets old
it becomes bitter and tough.
Melons are most interesting to
experiment with. We suppose that
melons originally came from Asia,
and parts of Africa. Melons are a
summer fruit. Over in England we
find the muskmelons often grown
under glass in hothouses. The
vines are trained upward rather
than allowed to lie prone. As the
melons grow large in the hot, dry
atmosphere, just the sort which
is right for their growth, they
become too heavy for the vine to
hold up. So they are held by
little bags of netting, just like
a tennis net in size of mesh. The
bags are supported on nails or
pegs.
Eight seeds are
placed two inches apart and an
inch deep. The hills should have
a four foot sweep on all sides;
the watermelon hills ought to
have an allowance of eight to ten
feet. Make the soil for these
hills very rich. As the little
plants get sizeable say about
four inches in height reduce the
number of plants to two in a
hill. Always in such work choose
the very sturdiest plants to
keep. Cut the others down close
to or a little below the surface
of the ground. Pulling up plants
is a shocking way to get rid of
them. I say shocking because the
pull is likely to disturb the
roots of the two remaining
plants. When the melon plant has
reached a length of a foot, pinch
off the end of it. This pinch
means this to the plant: just
stop growing long, take time now
to grow branches. Sand or lime
sprinkled about the hills tends
to keep bugs away.
The word pumpkin stands for good,
old-fashioned pies, for
Thanksgiving, for grandmother's
house. It really brings more to
mind than the word squash. I
suppose the squash is a bit more
useful, when we think of the fine
Hubbard, and the nice little
crooked-necked summer squashes;
but after all, I like to have
more pumpkins. And as for
Jack-o'-lanterns why they
positively demand pumpkins. In
planting these, the same general
directions hold good which were
given for melons. And use these
same for squash-planting, too.
But do not plant the two cousins
together, for they have a
tendency to run together. Plant
the pumpkins in between the hills
of corn and let the squashes go
in some other part of the garden.
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