Anonymous wrote:How do you protect your tomatoes from squirrels and rodents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grow what we like to eat in raised beds. I also like to include varieties that are hard to find in stores, noted in parenthesis, so I do tend to experiment.
Potatoes (rose fingerling), sweet potatoes (purple flesh), peas, sugar snap peas (purple), red long bean, purple pole bean, 4-5 varieties of radish and beets, mixed leaf lettuce, butter head lettuce, perennial arugula, red Russian and dinosaur kale, pickling cucumbers, gherkins, slicing cucumbers, lunchbox bell peppers, Hungarian paprika, tomatoes (3-4 types), leeks, green onion, walking onion, garlic, strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, figs, every possible herb and edible flower I can get my hands on, red zinger hibiscus.
I keep trying with varieties of squash, but I cannot keep ahead of the squash bugs. I've also played with mini watermelon, but find them a lot of work for little reward.
That’s impressive. Are you growing all those vegetables in one single season or alternate crops?
Anonymous wrote:How do you protect your tomatoes from squirrels and rodents?
Anonymous wrote:How do you protect your tomatoes from squirrels and rodents?
Anonymous wrote:I grow what we like to eat:
Tomatoes, eggplants, all kinds of sweet and hot peppers, okra, cucumbers, radishes, bush beans, pole beans, hyacinth beans, yard-long beans and lots and lots of herbs. I gave up on zucchini because of squash bugs but I sometimes plant a cucuzzi or tromboncino vine.
I also mix in flowers for beauty, salads and to attract pollinators and hummingbirds: marigolds, sunflowers, nasturtiums, Tithonia and scarlet runner beans.
I have raised beds and do all work myself.
Anonymous wrote:I grow what we like to eat in raised beds. I also like to include varieties that are hard to find in stores, noted in parenthesis, so I do tend to experiment.
Potatoes (rose fingerling), sweet potatoes (purple flesh), peas, sugar snap peas (purple), red long bean, purple pole bean, 4-5 varieties of radish and beets, mixed leaf lettuce, butter head lettuce, perennial arugula, red Russian and dinosaur kale, pickling cucumbers, gherkins, slicing cucumbers, lunchbox bell peppers, Hungarian paprika, tomatoes (3-4 types), leeks, green onion, walking onion, garlic, strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, figs, every possible herb and edible flower I can get my hands on, red zinger hibiscus.
I keep trying with varieties of squash, but I cannot keep ahead of the squash bugs. I've also played with mini watermelon, but find them a lot of work for little reward.