Garden Girls
Sprout
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- Jul 10, 2011
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Can you grow vegetables all year in a greenhouse?
I have had great luck with Swiss chard in the summer also. Most people seem to think it is a cool season crop, however, it stands up well to heat. The author of one of my greenhouse books claims that he had a plant for three years and would harvest the outside leaves and let the plant grow. He wrote that after three years it looked like a palm tree. Too bad there are no photos in the book as I would like to see that.digitS' said:Jack is making a good case for "protected growing."
Yes, you can fry things in the summer but, if you can moderate the heat, the greenhouse will moderate everything else, like wind and intense sunlight.
Basil has been a good summer greenhouse crop the last few years:
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-PYQHhkZQmI0/Th-CgRtSicI/AAAAAAAAA-s/eWMNgeXHGEU/s512/DSC00138.JPG
The tomatoes looked great a month after first frost last year but they were a bit unruly. I may try peppers in 2012.
No heat until mid-March, Garden Girls. So, there's no growing in my greenhouse during the winter months.
Steve
I can only answer for myself, so here goes: I use supplemental lighting for a few hours to allow at least 12 hours of decent light . Also, I have a small heater set to about 45 degrees in the greenhouse, which usually runs only at night.pebbles said:I guess my question to growing in a greenhouse is the opposite -I am in NW Arizona. We get to the low twenties at night for a month or so in the winter. Is there enough sun hours to grow in a green house in AZ over the winter months?