
Vegetable, Fruit, and Herb Gardening in May
Short List:
Sow French beans outdoors.
Plant out summer cauliflowers.
Make further sowings of salad crops.
Sow runner beans and erect canes to support them.
- Peas are ready to harvest three weeks after the first blooms appear. Use little scissors or pinch off the peas by hand. Harvest often and they will produce more!
- Plant warm season crops such as watermelon, cantaloupe, cucumber,
squash, eggplant, okra, sweet potatoes and southern peas this month.
- Keep harvesting fresh asparagus until the size of the spear gets smaller.
- Sprinkle small seeds evenly by putting them in a shaker. A set of caps for seed sprouting jars will probably include one with
appropriate-sized holes for the seeds you are planting. The problem of sowing fine seed too thickly can be reduced by mixing them with sand.
- Bothered by leaf hoppers already? Put out molasses traps to kill grasshoppers. Mix one part molasses to 8-10 parts water and place in a flat lid or container.
Clean and replenish as necessary.
- Mulch raspberry and black currant bushes with well rotted manure or compost. Make sure you first water the soil around the area until it is quite moist.
- Mulch raspberry and black currant bushes with well rotted manure or compost. Make sure you first water the soil around the area until it is quite moist.
- Remove runners from strawberries to encourage fruit production; or try the growth method below...
- Plant new strawberries on top of old ones for a more productive crop. Allow the runners to cover the beds as thick as they can get. Later in fall
cover them with about two or three inches of soil. The following spring you will be surprized at the strong production of foliage. The first year may be
less productive than years to come.
- Cut off garlic flowers for bigger bulbs. Harvest when leaves start to turn yellowish to brown. Store in a cool area that has good air circulation.
- Remove 2 or 3 peaches out of every 4 to produce larger fruit and keep limbs from breaking from too weight. Thin fruit when it is about the size of marbles.
Gardening Tips
- Cats like to dig in freshly cultivated soil. One way to deter them is to lay crumpled chicken wire over the bed and cut holes in it for planting. As
the plants grow, they'll hide the chicken wire, while it continues to discourage cats from using the bed as a litter box.
- When you see ants crawling on garden plants, look for aphids as well. Some ant species protect aphids, moving them from plant to plant and even taking
them underground into the anthill for overnight safety. The ants do this to ensure a supply of honeydew, a sugary substance secreted by aphids, on which
the ants feed. Discourage aphids by hosing them off your plants with a strong stream of water.
"So many seeds -- so little time."
--Author unknown
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