Jared77
Garden Addicted
Little insight. This is a little garden patch that I threw some plants into so we'd have some fresh tomatoes for sandwiches and hopefully pumpkins to carve in the fall. For those of you who don't know my wife and I bought a house (no more renting!!) plus we had our 2nd child so my garden plans were thrown for a loop. It was literally kind of a long shot anyway but I knew if I didn't plant it I wouldn't have anything. Nothing ventured nothing gained!
As far as the garden went I literally dropped the mower deck as low as I could mowed a fairly bald patch of ground where I wanted the garden to go, planted it and have been mulching it with grass clippings to keep the weeds at bay. When I planted I back filled with some compost and manure mixed together plus some time release fertilizer (I don't have the N-P-K I'm at work).
I didn't till the area because I was in a rush it was plant that or don't bother having anything. I didn't have really high expectations but the plants were doing ok.
I know the soil needs amending there are some bare spots so I know somethings missing but I didn't have time to make the necessary changes. I can fix the soil I can't fix the location. It was an old horse pasture but hasn't had horses on it in about 3 years prior to us buying it and planting there. Neighbor told me I'm planting near the old run in/lean to area. That structure was torn down when the daughter of the previous owners went to college and the horse was boarded at a local stable.
I know I need a soil sample but please keep reading I'm going to address that later in this post.
Ok here's my questions:
1) I've never seen so many male blossoms before in my life. Both my zukes, yellow squash, and pumpkins are literally covered in them. I've got 4 cukes, zukes and yellow squash. Pumpkins I've got a bunch of too. I don't know if stress from the less than ideal soil that's triggering this since they don't feel they can support fruit or what is triggering it. The cukes are doing the best as far as producing a good ratio of male to female flowers since I'm finding little cukes growing, and I do have at least a yellow squash producing too. Otherwise its all male blossoms. They are close to the base/center of the plant too all the squash are blooming really close to the base so I figured I'd be getting more but apparently not.
The plants are blooming on average 1 per plant and its all male blooms. They are Marketmore 76 cukes, and the zukes and yellow squash I'm not sure of but the are varieties I've grown before without issue at my old garden about 10 miles away. Similar soil conditions lots of heavy clay. As far as the pumpkin varieties, its Jack-O-Lantern, Big Macs, and another carving variety I can't remember the name of.
Its more puzzling than concerning. I know there will be more male than female blossoms, but this ratio is really different that anything I've had in the past.
2) After I get my soil sample done and I see what I'm missing when should I make amendments? I had thought about doing it late summer/early fall so I can till it all in the amendments have time to settle in through winter and spring thaw so come spring I'm ahead of the game and ready to go. My previous garden I only added manure which I spread in the fall and spring (as it was available) and then the spring tilling and planted like normal and the garden was great.
I'm asking because I'm going to expand the garden significantly (seriously its going to be about triple the available planted area) plus I've got to get a fence up too so I hoped to get a jump on things for next year.
Sorry to ramble on I wanted people to have some back history before they posted their impressions/thoughts.
So what do you think? I appreciate any input on this.....
As far as the garden went I literally dropped the mower deck as low as I could mowed a fairly bald patch of ground where I wanted the garden to go, planted it and have been mulching it with grass clippings to keep the weeds at bay. When I planted I back filled with some compost and manure mixed together plus some time release fertilizer (I don't have the N-P-K I'm at work).
I didn't till the area because I was in a rush it was plant that or don't bother having anything. I didn't have really high expectations but the plants were doing ok.
I know the soil needs amending there are some bare spots so I know somethings missing but I didn't have time to make the necessary changes. I can fix the soil I can't fix the location. It was an old horse pasture but hasn't had horses on it in about 3 years prior to us buying it and planting there. Neighbor told me I'm planting near the old run in/lean to area. That structure was torn down when the daughter of the previous owners went to college and the horse was boarded at a local stable.
I know I need a soil sample but please keep reading I'm going to address that later in this post.
Ok here's my questions:
1) I've never seen so many male blossoms before in my life. Both my zukes, yellow squash, and pumpkins are literally covered in them. I've got 4 cukes, zukes and yellow squash. Pumpkins I've got a bunch of too. I don't know if stress from the less than ideal soil that's triggering this since they don't feel they can support fruit or what is triggering it. The cukes are doing the best as far as producing a good ratio of male to female flowers since I'm finding little cukes growing, and I do have at least a yellow squash producing too. Otherwise its all male blossoms. They are close to the base/center of the plant too all the squash are blooming really close to the base so I figured I'd be getting more but apparently not.
The plants are blooming on average 1 per plant and its all male blooms. They are Marketmore 76 cukes, and the zukes and yellow squash I'm not sure of but the are varieties I've grown before without issue at my old garden about 10 miles away. Similar soil conditions lots of heavy clay. As far as the pumpkin varieties, its Jack-O-Lantern, Big Macs, and another carving variety I can't remember the name of.
Its more puzzling than concerning. I know there will be more male than female blossoms, but this ratio is really different that anything I've had in the past.
2) After I get my soil sample done and I see what I'm missing when should I make amendments? I had thought about doing it late summer/early fall so I can till it all in the amendments have time to settle in through winter and spring thaw so come spring I'm ahead of the game and ready to go. My previous garden I only added manure which I spread in the fall and spring (as it was available) and then the spring tilling and planted like normal and the garden was great.
I'm asking because I'm going to expand the garden significantly (seriously its going to be about triple the available planted area) plus I've got to get a fence up too so I hoped to get a jump on things for next year.
Sorry to ramble on I wanted people to have some back history before they posted their impressions/thoughts.
So what do you think? I appreciate any input on this.....