Nyboy
Garden Master
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2010
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Maybe so, @AMKuska .
I'd hate to be cut off from all squash varieties so being stuck in the front yard would be a problem. What do you suppose is the difference, soil, sunlight, the evil stares of neighbors, their nasty dogs trampling the vines ..?
Yeah, pests can make a difference. Potato beetles were just not a problem in location A, they can be a big problem in location B. Still, spinosad knocked them down better than hoped so that those pests were only taking over for a few days in the spuds (and eggplants).
Steve
Yes, I've had that happen... even from one side of the garden to the other. My rural garden is 100' X 100', and there is about a 6" difference in height going N-S. The low end drains much more slowly, so plants which don't like wet feet do poorly there. In wet years (like last year) the low end in unworkable; but even in good years, I won't direct-seed beans there.Is there a plant variety that you could enjoy in one garden location but it failed to thrive when you tried to grow it in another location? Climate conditions are about the same. It may have been a reliable favorite but you are left wondering: Why did it have good seasons there but not here?
My squash gets powdery mildew in the front, but never in the back. I don't know how to get rid of it, so I just grow squash in the back.
What is a host/reservoir species?
My front yard is full sun, and the garden is facing south. There are no trees. I have no idea which way the wind blows. I live in the puget sound area of Washington, it rains almost all year round. We get a few weeks of hot and dry as we are having right now, but then it will go back to regular rain fall.
The backyard garden is on the north side, and has some shade from a neighbor's tree. It's a raised garden bed, which might make a difference.
Oh I see.
Actually, nothing else in the yard gets powdery mildew except any kind of squash like plant. This includes melons and pumpkins. I'm being really broad when I say that. I even specifically purchase seeds that say "Powdery mildew resistant" and still get it.