digitS'
Garden Master
Maybe, we don't have to.
The last of the peas came off the vines about 10 days ago. I'm not very tolerant of watching mildew destroy plants while I get a handful of something off the vines. Out they went! In went the bean seed ... I like snap beans. No question. Still, I'll miss the peas.
These are the hottest days of the year, hereabouts. I'm planning on being out there under the sun sowing snow peas, tomorrow.
Or, snap peas. I tried those in 2016 and, if anything, they did better than the snow peas. However, we had the wettest October in history last year. After the expected frost in September, the plants still in the garden had a healing rain. Several ... for weeks!
Don't be fooled by peas' reputation for frost hardiness, however. Cold weather will slow them down to nuthin! They need recovery time and if there are flowers when the frost hits, those will be lost. Still, peas don't have to just be an early season crop. They grow some under hot conditions. The vines aren't likely to be as robust but they can set themselves up for a fall crop. First the seed has to germinate and seedlings emerge during local conditions in the nineties and humidity in the teens. They have been able to do it, several years running. They are following my potato harvest again this year.
Steve
The last of the peas came off the vines about 10 days ago. I'm not very tolerant of watching mildew destroy plants while I get a handful of something off the vines. Out they went! In went the bean seed ... I like snap beans. No question. Still, I'll miss the peas.
These are the hottest days of the year, hereabouts. I'm planning on being out there under the sun sowing snow peas, tomorrow.
Or, snap peas. I tried those in 2016 and, if anything, they did better than the snow peas. However, we had the wettest October in history last year. After the expected frost in September, the plants still in the garden had a healing rain. Several ... for weeks!
Don't be fooled by peas' reputation for frost hardiness, however. Cold weather will slow them down to nuthin! They need recovery time and if there are flowers when the frost hits, those will be lost. Still, peas don't have to just be an early season crop. They grow some under hot conditions. The vines aren't likely to be as robust but they can set themselves up for a fall crop. First the seed has to germinate and seedlings emerge during local conditions in the nineties and humidity in the teens. They have been able to do it, several years running. They are following my potato harvest again this year.