The Riverside Press-Enterprise

The sweetest veggie growing guide ever

- Please send questions, comments and photos to joshua@perfectpla­nts. com. For more informatio­n about area plants and gardens, go to Joshua Siskin's website, thesmarter­gardener.com.

“You can never replicate the taste of garden-fresh vegetables with what you buy at the grocery store. But that’s especially true for carrots. More so than maybe any other vegetable in this book.” So writes author Joe Lamp’l, who gardens near Atlanta, in “The Vegetable Gardening Book” (Cool Springs Press, 2022). Subtitled “Your complete guide to growing an edible organic garden from seed to harvest,” this is the only book on growing vegetables you need to have in your library. There are not enough superlativ­es to describe its comprehens­ive, step-by-step descriptio­n of the process of creating a food garden. Moreover, it’s written in a chatty style that gives you the feeling you are in conversati­on with a friend, and a very wise friend at that.

Getting back to carrots, which can be planted throughout the fall (along with other root crops such as beets, radishes, turnips and parsnips), Lamp’l says a major challenge in growing them is keeping their seeds moist until they germinate, which can take up to three weeks. To solve this problem, he covers the seeds with burlap, which, when wet, protects the soil over the tiny seeds, planted only 1/4 inch deep, from hot, desiccatin­g sun. He regularly lifts the burlap to check the seeds’ status and removes it once the seeds begin to sprout. And then Lamp’l gets personal — as he does throughout the book — in a way that magnetical­ly draws the reader into his world: “And one last thing. I love seeing the bright green ferny foliage of the carrot tops every time I walk into the garden. No matter what the weather is like, or what else is growing in the garden (and later in winter, there’s not much else), those frilly fresh carrot tops always seem to lift my spirits.”

Lamp’l grows all his vegetables in wood-framed raised beds. “I’ve come to believe that raised beds simply offer overwhelmi­ngly obvious benefits to in-ground gardens,” he writes. The primary advantage of this method of growing is that you bring in the soil of your choice, since soil, after all, is the best guarantor for producing healthy crops. This is especially important for carrots since straight roots depend on “deep, loose, rich, fertile, evenly moist soil.” The author’s “perfect raised bed soil recipe” mix includes “50% high-quality topsoil, 30% high quality compost, and 20% organic matter.” The organic matter may consist entirely of mushroom compost, composted manure, worm castings, aged and shredded leaves or ground-up bark, or any combinatio­n of them. He recommends applicatio­n of this same mix as a top dressing to the beds once a season. As an alternativ­e, he enthusiast­ically endorses fabric grow bags, noting that a friend grows “over 200 of the biggest, healthiest, prettiest tomato plants you’ve every seen using these bags in his driveway!” The author does note that in-ground beds retain moisture better than raised beds.

When it comes to knowing when to water a vegetable garden, Lamp’l recommends the following test: “Stick you finger in the garden bed down to the second knuckle. If your finger comes up dirty, there’s enough water in the soil. However, if it comes up dry and relatively clean, the soil is too dry, and it’s time to water.” Regarding quantity of water, Lamp’l calls 1 inch a week “a nearly universal guideline.” If you water with a drip system, place an empty tuna can under an emitter; when it’s full, your weekly 1-inch water allotment has been delivered. Still, if your tomatoes show signs of water stress during a sizzling week in August, supplement­al irrigation will be needed.

You can plant peas in November, and Lamp’l reminds us of the three types to consider. Shelling peas are the ones you buy in frozen condition; their pods are inedible. Snow peas have flat pods that can be enjoyed freshly picked “before the pods inside are fully mature” or cooked in stir-fry dishes. Snap peas, which are sugar sweet, “give you the best of both worlds. Both the peas and the pods are equally delicious.” The Sugar Ann snap pea is unusual since it has a bushy growth habit and does not require vertical support, unlike nearly every other variety of pea.

If you have any recommenda­tions regarding varieties or growing techniques of fall- or winterplan­ted vegetables, email them so I can share them with readers of this column.

 ?? COURTESY OF COOL SPRINGS PRESS ?? Joe Lamp’l is a knowledgea­ble and readable authority.
COURTESY OF COOL SPRINGS PRESS Joe Lamp’l is a knowledgea­ble and readable authority.
 ?? ??

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