Showing posts with label Vegetable Varieties for Georgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vegetable Varieties for Georgia. Show all posts

Monday, September 21, 2015

Sweet Potato Harvest Time

Mr. Hugh Byrd of Kennesaw with sweet potatoes from his garden.
PHOTO/Ellen Shelnutt, Master Gardener Volunteer
Many sweet potato varieties reach maturity in about 110-120 days, which means that, for most of our gardens, it is just about harvest time.

Here at the Cobb Extension office, we had a wonderful reminder from a local gardener, Mr. Hugh Byrd, that harvest time is here.  The reminder was in the form of four giant sweet potatoes that he harvested from just one plant in his garden!

The variety that he grew this year is Beauregard, which is a great variety for home gardeners in our area. The tubers are sweet, getting even sweeter after curing for a couple of weeks in a warm location, and they cook up soft.

Mr. Byrd has been gardening in his Kennesaw yard for about 20 years, having taken over the task when his wife, the original  family gardener, developed health problems. She now focuses her food-growing efforts on growing tomatoes in large containers near the house. The couple has been married for 60 years.

We have been assured that, if the next plant Mr. Byrd digs up has even larger sweet potatoes, he will let us know.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Choosing Seeds for the Vegetable Garden

Seed selection for the summer vegetable garden can be a lot of fun - there are so many varieties from which to choose! However, seed selection is also one of the gardener's first lines of defense against diseases and pests in the garden.

UGA runs trials of vegetable seeds and publishes a list of varieties/cultivars that do well generally across the state, even with the disease and pest pressures that occur here in the Southeastern U.S. A new gardener can improve his or her odds of success by choosing at least some varieties from this list, which is included in UGA's Vegetable Planting Chart.

For example, the Better Boy hybrid tomato has the letters VFN on the seed packet. These letters indicate that the plants grown from these seeds are resistant to Verticillium wilt, Fusarium wilt, and root knot nematodes. These three problems are naturally occurring and widely distributed in Georgia's soils. All three can kill non-resistant plants. In resistant plants, infection can still occur, but the plants will grow and produce fruit in spite of the infection.

If a gardener is planning to buy plants rather than grow them from seed, looking for the VFN on the tag that comes with a plant can also be a good idea, since more varieties than just Better Boy will be resistant to those three problems. The UGA publication Georgia Home Grown Tomatoes lists more diseases for which tomatoes can be resistant and the acronyms associated with each one.

For cucumbers, the mildew diseases - both powdery mildew and downy mildew - tend to kill everyone's vines sometime in July or early August, but some of the UGA recommended varieties usually withstand the onslaught of those diseases a little longer than some other varieties.

According to Cornell University's Horticulture Department:
"Of all cucurbits, cucumbers have the most disease resistance as a result of breeding. The concern is bacterial wilt, which is spread by cucumber beetles. Beetles can be reduced by constructing tents of fine cheesecloth or using floating row covers over young transplants and seedlings. Covers do need to be removed early to mid-season to allow for pollination. If the resistant variety listed is grown, angular leaf spot (ALS), cucumber mosaic virus, powdery mildew, and downy mildew are of no concern. Slicers:Dasher II (Tolerant to ALS), Marketmore 76*, Marketmore 80*, Monarch, Salad Bush (not ALS resistant), Supersett, Trailblazer* (not ALS resistant); Pickles: Calypso, Regal, Score."
The UGA publication Growing Cucumbers in the Home Garden supports that statement of insect control's making a big difference in the success of the cucumber patch. This is what it has to say about cucumber beetles:
"Control weeds, insects, and diseases for optimum yield. Cucumber beetles, aphids, mites, pickle worms, bacterial wilt, anthracnose, powdery and downy mildew, and angular leaf spot are potential problems in cucumbers. The early and continuous control of the cucumber beetle is critical to success in growing cucumbers. The cucumber beetle can infect the plant with bacterial wilt as early as the cotyledon stage, when seedlings are just emerging from the ground. Bacterial wilt causes the plants to wilt and die."
The cucumber beetle comes in two varieties. The spotted version looks a lot like a ladybug. It's yellow, though, instead of red, and there is a striped cucumber beetle, too.

Squash Vine Borer larva and its damage - Photo/Amy Whitney
For squash, all of the summer squashes are susceptible to the squash vine borer (SVB), which kills plants by eating the insides of the stem close to the ground.

Ways to get more squash before this happens include planting early-producing varieties, planting a whole lot of plants, covering the plants with row-covers in the weeks before the plants begin to bloom (so the moths that lay the eggs of the damaging larva can't get to the squash plants), and more. Most of the available techniques aren't 100% cure-alls, and they all require some advance planning.

One more-sure way around the problem is to plant a completely different species of squash. There is a variety called Zucchetta (or sometimes Trombocino) that is actually the same species as many of the winter squashes and that produces zucchini-like fruits on crazy-long vines that are very resistant to the SVBs. For gardeners who have the space and are just "done" with the SVBs, this might be a way to go.

Although it may seem (at this point) as though there are a million problems lurking in the garden waiting to decimate your crops, thinking about potential problems now and planning ways to manage them, starting with the seed and transplant choices, can make the summer harvest more abundant and the whole gardening experience more joyful.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Favorite Veggie Varieties of Cobb's Master Gardeners

A request went out to Cobb County's Master Gardeners for their one or two most favorite vegetable varieties for each of the plants/crops they grow. This is the result:



Tomatoes
Better Boy
Mentioned by two respondents. One said, “My personal favorite is Better Boy for a full size tasty tomato that bears up until frost.”

Park’s Whopper


Brandywine


Kellogg Breakfast


Sweet 100 (cherry)
“I love the sweet, small fruit that is prolific most of the summer. When the heat, drought, insects and disease have stifled my other tomatoes, I know I will still have cherry tomatoes from my Sweet 100 plant!”

Brandy Boy


Big Mama
“best for putting up”

Early Girl


4th of July


Black Cherry
“just wonderful”

Wuhib (paste type)
“Amazing productivity and disease resistance.”






Beans, Pole
White Mountain Half Runner
One gardener will only grow the ones from the Ferry Morse seed company.

Blue Lake


Rattlesnake


Chinese Yard Long


Musica
“a VERY heavy producer”

Kentucky Blue




Beans, Bush
Roma
Mentioned by two respondents.

Festiva


Soleil (a yellow bean)


Emerite (French filet bean)
“tiny and tender and flavorful”



Peppers, Sweet
Sweet Goliath


King Arthur


Chocolate Bell


Sweet Banana


Christmas Bell


Camelot


Big Bertha


Colossal




Peppers, Hot
Lemon Drop


Bhut jolokia (very hot)


Jalepeno
Mentioned by two respondents.



Lettuce
Red Sails
Mentioned by two respondents.

Black Seeded Simpson
Mentioned by two respondents.

Heirloom Speckles


Marvel of Four Seasons


Buttercrunch
Mentioned by two respondents.

Red Oak




Swiss Chard
Rainbow


Perpetual Spinach




Watermelon
Moon & Stars


Georgia Rattlesnake




Spinach
Renegade




Shallot
Ambition




Garlic
Mr. Pope’s
“being developed by Southern Exposure Seed Exchange”



Peas, Green
Sugar Snaps
Mentioned by two respondents.

Telephone


Sugar Ann




Peas, Southern
Purple Hull


Pigott Family Heirloom


Zipper Pea




Kale
Tuscan Lacinato




Fennel
Fino


Florence




Potato, Sweet
Vardamon




Potato, white/Irish
Fingerling Russian Banana


Yukon Gold


Russet


Kennebec


Purple Majesty


Red Pontiac




Pumpkin
Rouge d’etampes (Cinderella)


Knucklehead, Goosebumps
From the “Superfreak” Series



Turnip
De Milan Rouge




Squash, summer
Yellow Crookneck


Yellow Straightneck




Squash, winter
Chinese Pumpkin Squash




Okra
Clemson Spineless




Collards
Morris Heading




Beets
Chioggia




Cantaloupe
Ambrosia


Hale’s Best




Cucumbers
Any burpless hybrid


Straight Nine


 There are so many varieties available that choosing is difficult, and there are some varieties in catalogs and on seed racks that won't work well in our soils and climate and with our diseases and pests. The hope is that this list will help other gardeners as they plan their upcoming gardening year.

UGA also lists vegetable varieties that have been shown to do well more generally in gardens across Georgia. The list is part of the Vegetable Planting Chart that helps gardeners decide when to plant each kind of vegetable. Dates on the chart are for middle Georgia, which means that gardeners in Cobb County will need to adjust the planting dates by one to two weeks (later for spring planting, earlier for fall crops).