Gardening Without Irrigation: or without much, anyway eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 88 pages of information about Gardening Without Irrigation.

Gardening Without Irrigation: or without much, anyway eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 88 pages of information about Gardening Without Irrigation.

Irrigation: With normal sprinkler irrigation, corn may be spaced 8 inches apart in rows 30 inches apart, still yielding one or two ears per stalk.

Varieties:  Were I a devoted sweetcorn eater without enough irrigation, I’d be buying a few dozen freshly picked ears from the back of a pickup truck parked on a corner during local harvest season.  Were I a devoted corn grower without any irrigation, I’d be experimenting with various types of field corn instead of sweet corn.  Were I a self-sufficiency buff trying a ernestly to produce all my own cereal, I’d accept that the maritime Northwest is a region where survivalists will eat wheat, rye, millet, and other small grains.

Many varieties of field corn are nearly as sweet as ordinary sweet corn, but grain varieties become starchy and tough within hours of harvest.  Eaten promptly, “pig” corn is every bit as tasty as Jubilee.  I’ve had the best dry-garden results with Northstine Dent (JSS) and Garland Flint (JSS).  Hookers Sweet Indian (TSC) has a weak root system.

Successfully Starting Cucurbits From Seed

With cucurbits, germination depends on high-enough soil temperature and not too much moisture.  Squash are the most chill and moisture tolerant, melons the least.  Here’s a failure-proof and simple technique that ensures you’ll plant at exactly the right time.

Cucumbers, squash, and melons are traditionally sown atop a deeply dug, fertilized spot that usually looks like a little mound after it is worked and is commonly called a hill.  About two weeks before the last anticipated frost date in your area, plant five or six squash seeds about 2 inches deep in a clump in the very center of that hill.  Then, a week later, plant another clump at 12 o’clock.  In another week, plant another clump at 3 o’clock, and continue doing this until one of the sowings sprouts.  Probably the first try won’t come up, but the hill will certainly germinate several clumps of seedlings.  If weather conditions turn poor, a later-to-sprout group may outgrow those that came up earlier.  Thin gradually to the best single plant by the time the vines are running.

When the first squash seeds appear it is time to begin sowing cucumbers, starting a new batch each week until one emerges.  When the cucumbers first germinate, it’s time to try melons.

Approaching cucurbits this way ensures that you’ll get the earliest possible germination while being protected against the probability that cold, damp weather will prevent germination or permanently spoil the growth prospects of the earlier seedlings.

Cucumbers

Sowing date: About May 5 to 15 at Elkton.

Spacing: Most varieties usually run five about 3 feet from the hill.  Space the hills about 5 to 6 feet apart in all directions.

Irrigation: Like melons.  Regular and increasing amounts of fertigation will increase the yield several hundred percent.

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Project Gutenberg
Gardening Without Irrigation: or without much, anyway from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.