Jane23
Garden Ornament
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2022
- Messages
- 238
- Reaction score
- 472
- Points
- 95
- Location
- South Eastern Montana, Zone 3b
This sounds like my first experiment with growing Okra. I am not from the south and did not grow up anywhere they grew. I read articles and watched a few videos showing these massive plants that were taller than me producing tons of okra.
We had a late start to summer, so I did not expect them to go at all, even though they sprout. To my surprise, they started producing okra even though they were tiny little things. The weather has turned colder now, and while they are sun-loving plants, they are still going. They are only up to about my knees, and I expect to lose them soon.
What I learned this summer about okra is that if you let it grow beyond about three inches, it turns "woody," is difficult to cut, and tastes disgusting. They are terrific for seed saving, but let them dry out and harvest the seeds for further drying. I will be ready to go next year with a larger bed as my husband loves gumbo and jambalaya.
I did save some in the freezer, as they keep so that I can make those meals during the cold days of winter and dream of my spring garden.
We had a late start to summer, so I did not expect them to go at all, even though they sprout. To my surprise, they started producing okra even though they were tiny little things. The weather has turned colder now, and while they are sun-loving plants, they are still going. They are only up to about my knees, and I expect to lose them soon.
What I learned this summer about okra is that if you let it grow beyond about three inches, it turns "woody," is difficult to cut, and tastes disgusting. They are terrific for seed saving, but let them dry out and harvest the seeds for further drying. I will be ready to go next year with a larger bed as my husband loves gumbo and jambalaya.
I did save some in the freezer, as they keep so that I can make those meals during the cold days of winter and dream of my spring garden.