Never miss a recipe!
Enter your email address to subscribe to Harvest to Table free via email:
almanac apples artichoke arugula asparagus basil beans beets best bet varieties blueberries bok choy books broccoli brussels sprouts cabbage carrots cauliflower celery chard cherries chilies Chinese cabbage Chinese leaves compost cooking cool-season vegetables corn cucumbers dates delicious bite delicious bites dried beans eggplant farmers market fennel fresh this week garbanzo bean gardening tips garlic grapefruit grapes herbs horseradish hot peppers how to grow in the garden kale kitchen garden kitchen garden almanac kohlrabi leeks legumes lemon lettuce mandarin orange melons mint mushrooms mustard greens nectarines okra olives onions oranges parsnips peaches pears peas peppers pests and diseases pests diseases problems potatoes pumpkin radish recipes rutabaga salsify seed starting shallots soil Southern Hemisphere spinach spring onions squash strawberry summer squash sun-dried tomato sunchokes sweet corn sweet pepper sweet potato tangerine tomato turnip turnip greens vegetable garden watermelons winter squash zucchini
Categories
- Around Here
- Berries
- Best Bet Varieties
- Bulb Vegetables
- Cereals & Grains
- Citrus Fruits
- Companion Planting
- Container Gardening
- Cooking
- Delicious Bite
- Dried & Candied Fruit, Rhubarb
- Dry Gardening
- Flower Vegetables
- Food For Thought
- Fresh This Week
- Fruit Vegetables
- Fruits
- Gardening Tips
- Harvest and Storage
- Herbs, Spices & Condiments
- How to Grow
- In The Garden
- Indoor Gardening
- Kitchen Garden Almanac
- Leaf Vegetables
- Legumes
- Making A Kitchen Garden
- Melons
- Mushrooms
- Nuts & Seeds
- Pests Diseases Problems
- Polls
- Pome Fleshy Fruits
- Quick Crops
- Recipes
- Root Vegetables
- Season Extension
- Seed Starting
- Southern Hemisphere
- Stalk Vegetables
- Stone Fleshy Fruits
- Storing Vegetables and Fruits
- Tropical Fruits
- Tuber Vegetables
- Vegetables
Measurement Converter
Hardiness Zone Finder
Find your zone by entering your zip code
Favorite Food and Garden Blogs
American Community Gardening Association
Center for Ecoliteracy
Common Ground Garden Los Angeles
Compost Guide
Culinate
Eat Local Challenge
Eat Well Guide
Edible Communities
The Edible Schoolyard
The Ethicurean
Food Routes
The Garden Lady
Gardeners Anonymous
In My Kitchen Garden
Local Harvest
Locavores
Mighty Foods
Mother Earth's Garden
National Gardening Association
Reading Dirt
Seafood Watch
Seeds of Change
Shirls Gardenwatch
Simply Recipes
Slow Food USA
Sonoma County Master Gardeners
Sustainable Table
This Garden Is Illegal
Thoughts on the Table
Veggie Gardening Tips
What to Eat
Harvest to Table
A practical guide to food in the garden and market
Warm Region Kitchen Garden Almanac for May
Filed under: Kitchen Garden Almanac, Tagged as: kitchen garden almanac
Is it spring?
If the weather has settled in your region, now is the time to direct sow warm-weather vegetable seeds. Once the last frost is past, vegetable starts can go into the garden as well.
Few seeds will germinate if the soil temperature is below 45ºF (7ºC) and warm-weather crops will not thrive until the night temperatures stay consistently above 50ºF (10ºC). Follow the high and low temperatures for several days if you are unsure if the time is right to begin sowing and planting out warm-season crops.
If you do get started and temperatures unexpectedly dip, use horticultural fleece or cloches to protect summer veggies from danger.
You can minimize transplant shock if you hold off putting melons and summer and winter squash seedlings in the garden until 10 day after the date of the last expected frost. Peppers and eggplants can be transplanted into the garden two to three weeks after the last frost.
Herb starts like dill, oregano, sweet marjoram, cilantro, rosemary, sage, and thyme can be transplanted into the garden this month. Make sure the weather is settled warm before you plant out basil and lemon grass.
Here is a kitchen garden guide for warm regions--growing zones 7-11-- for the month of May:
Greenhouse and coldframe.
□ Sow successions of tender vegetables such as tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, and runner beans to plant out later.
□ Plant greenhouse tomato plants in large pots, or plant them in grow bags.
□ Water and feed tomatoes, cucumbers, and peppers, never letting the soil dry out. Remove side-shoots from tomatoes.
□ Attach slings or nets to greenhouse melons as they swell.
□ Introduce biological controls to keep down pests such as greenhouse whiteflies and spider mites.
Vegetables in the garden.
□ Start sowing vegetables without protection if the soil and night time temperatures have warmed.
□ Thin beets, carrots, lettuce, radishes, spinach and other half-hardy and hardy seedlings planted late last month. As crops are harvested, plant successions of early or start introducing summer crops.
□ Early in the month, prepare outdoor sites for cucumbers, squashes, and tomatoes. Erect supports for runner beans, and place stakes, poles, and trellises in place for tall and climbing crops.
□ Stake tomatoes and tie them gently to stakes..
□ Remove cloches from broad beans, carrots, and peas.
□ Mid-month sowing: sow seeds of beans, lima beans, corn, okra, squash, cucumber, cantaloupe, Chinese cabbage, and other tender vegetables and herbs after temperatures have reached the 70sF.
□ Sow cucumbers in mounds enriched with plenty of well-rotted manure and compost.
□ Set out transplants after mid-month: tomato, eggplant, pepper, and sweet potato.
□ Set out sweet potato slips on a cloudy day. Form little mound of soil over young potato shoots to protect them from frost.
□ Pinch out the tips on broad beans to encourage good pod set and to deter attack from aphids.
□ Make furthers sowings of salad crops and summer spinach.
□ Stop watering onions, garlic, and shallots when the foliage begins to turn yellow.
Detailed growing tips at the HOW TO GROW Archive: click here.
Harvest early crops.
□ Start picking broad beans when the pods are finger thick.
□ Continue to cut asparagus. As the asparagus harvest ends, cut back female plants with berries.
□ When peas stop producing, cut vines to ground (do not pull allowing their roots to fix nitrogen in the soil). Replace early cool-weather crops with summer crops.
Successive plantings.
□ Make successional sowings of early crops: beetroot, carrots, lettuces, and turnips. Make successive sowing of lettuce, salad crops, and summer spinach, turnips, runner beans, green beans, endive, radishes, and kohlrabi.
Late month sowing and transplants.
□ Sow sweet corn outdoors in mild areas when further frost is unlikely. Most vegetables can be sown now, so check the packets.
□ Sow French and runner beans, and pole beans, long-rooted beets, sea kale, salsify, and sweet corn.
□ Plant out late-summer cauliflowers and in the north Brussels sprouts. Plant out vegetable seedlings such as cabbages, cauliflowers, celery, sweet corn, tomatoes, and marrows. Plant outdoor tomatoes, and tie them gently, but firmly, to stakes to secure them.
Herbs.
□ Plant or pot up basil seedlings.
□ Take cuttings of pot marjoram, rosemary, sage, and thyme.
□ Divide and transplant perennial herbs.
□ Divide any straggly mint and thyme plants.
Plant or pot up basil seedlings.
Pests.
□ Watch for aphids on broad beans and root flies on cabbages, carrots and onions. Keep after weeds.
Feeding and watering.
□ Give side dressing of compost tea to half-grown plants.
□ Keep all plants watered and well mulched.
Fruit trees.
□ Feed summer-fruiting plants with potassium sulfate to promote good flowering and fruit. Control weeds around bush and cane fruit.
□ Thin the fruit on apples, peaches, nectarines pears, and plums when they reach marble-size. Thin heavy-cropping nectarines and peaches when fruit is ½ in (1-1.5 cm) in diameter.
□ Water new plantings deeply if weather is dry. Water plentifully when fruit is swelling.
□ Hang coddling moth traps on apple trees.
□ Spray against apple scab, mildew, and aphids.
□ Prune wood damaged by fire blight.
□ Remove any shoots on wall-trained fruits that are growing directly toward or away from the wall.
□ Remove the blossoms from newly planted fruit trees to direct the plants energy into the production of strong new wood.
Berries.
□ Plant new strawberries and put cloches over strawberries if you want an early corp. Harvest strawberries as they ripen. Protect strawberry fruits with straw or black plastic sheeting.
□ Keep new canes of blackberries and loganberries separate from the current year's fruiting canes. Tie new canes of blackberries and hybrid berries to a system of support wires, allowing a maximum of eight canes per plant.
□ Remove weak shoots from brambles. Thin our raspberry canes. Spray raspberries against raspberry beetles. Apply the first spray as soon as the first fruit turns pink.
□ Summer-prune gooseberries by cutting back side-shoots to five leaves.
□ Feed blackberry and hybrid berry plants with ammonium sulfate or other high-nitrogen fertilizer. Cover berries with netting to protect them from birds.
Citrus.
□ Plant citrus and tropical fruit this month. Feed citrus fruit with sulfate of ammonia; feed established trees with iron sulfate. Water citrus deeply in dry weather.
Containers.
□ Plant summer container plants when the danger of frost is past.
□ Feed new transplants with liquid fertilizer and water as needed.
Regional Vegetable Gardening Tips for May:
These suggestions are divided into 4 major geographical areas: North and East and Midwest (zones 2 in the northern most areas to 6 along the coast), the South (zones 7 in the north to 10 in the far south), the Southwest and California (zones 7 in the coolest areas to 11), and the Northeast (zones 5 in the highest elevations to 8 along the coast).
North and East and
□ Early in the month: Rush to get these crops in if you haven't planted
□ Succession plantings of lettuce, beets, and carrots should be made from now until August, every 2 or 3 weeks, to provide a constant supply.
□ Set out any time during the month, successive starts of cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower plants for late-season harvest.
□ Plants of tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers can go in the garden as soon as damager of frost is past. Harden off warm-weather starts before setting them in the garden.
□ Beans, corn, cucumbers, melons, potatoes, and squash may be planted in open ground in by mid-month, assuming the ground is not too cold. Sow bush beans 1 inch deep, 3 inches apart in rows 18 inches apart. Pole beans go into hills, 4 to 8 seeds to a hill; later thin to 2 or 3 plants.
□ Plant tomatoes in well-fertilized soil and strong supports. Work in phosphate and potash rock; tomatoes require little nitrogen. Keep tomatoes well watered.
□ Side dressings of complete fertilizer or aged compost will help along all young seedling plants.
□ If the season is mild, plant early corn. Add plenty of compost and a pound each of pulverized phosphate rock and potash rock to every 10 square feet of soil.
□ Early thinning of plants in rows is important--overcrowding will lead to poor development. Thin bush beans, 4 inches apart; beets 3 inches apart; carrots, 2 inches apart; chard 6-8 inches; corn, 10-12 inches; lettuce 6-10 inches; New Zealand spinach, 12-18 inches; onions, 2-3 inches; peas, 2-3 inches; radishes, 2 inches; rutabagas, 4-5 inches; spinach, 3-4 inches; turnips, 3-4 inches. Replanting thinnings is rarely successful.
South.
□ Direct sow warm-weather crops: bush and pole lima beans, pole snap beans, cantaloupes, celery, collards, cucumbers, gourds, New Zealand spinach, okra, black-eye peas and crowder peas, pumpkins, rutabagas, squash, sunflower, turnips, and watermelon (if there is room). Sow a second planting of corn. Plant sweet potato slips, tomatoes, eggplants, collards, peanuts, and peppers. Plant cabbage for fall crop.
□ Plant seed of edible soybeans.
□ Cut okra pods before they mature, so the plants will continue to bear all season. Plant in wide rows with stalks every 2 or 3 feet.
□ Set out tomato plants. Plant 4 to 6 inches deep, water well and shade for 3 days. Pinch out suckers that develop between the main stalk and the branches while they are quite small. Prune to 2 stems. This will prevent them from utilizing plant food and making too much foliage. Stake with 5-foot stakes.
□ Stake tomatoes, eggplants and peppers when about one foot high.
□ Succession plantings: Set plants of eggplant, pimento, hot and sweet peppers where heads of cabbage, lettuce, mustard and other cool-weather crops have been harvested.
Southwest and
□ Plant warm-weather crops now: bush and pole beans, lima beans, beets, cabbage, cantaloupes, casaba, cauliflower, celery, chard, sweet corn, Chinese and Armenian cucumbers, eggplants, gourds, leaf lettuce (in shade), lima beans, melons, New Zealand spinach, okra, peppers, pumpkins, radish, salsify, squash tomatoes. Train Chinese and Armenian cucumbers, pole beans and tomatoes on stakes.
□ Plant heat-loving vegetables in deeply composted holes: lima beans, summer squash, peppers, eggplant, and tomatoes.
□ Tomatoes: a trellis-supported tomato will be more productive than one that sprawls on the ground. Set a trellis before the plant is in the ground more than 3 weeks. Train each branch as it grows. Tie stems in loosely so as not to cut into the branch. Set tomatoes deeper in the garden than they were in the seedbed.
□ Make successive plantings of vegetables every 10 days.
□ Watercress can be planted in shallow tub. Leaf lettuces can be planted in the shade.
□ Plant summer cover crops of the drought-resistant legumes: tepary and black-eye beans.
□ Mulch heavily with compost to help retain soil moisture and improve soil tilth.
□ Irrigate thoroughly once a week. Gently dig around roots to see if plants have sufficient moisture. Water at the base of plants.
□ Don't work with beans or tomato vines when they are wet. Fungal diseases are easily spread in drops of water.
Northwest.
□ All plants may be set out as soon as the last frost date has passed: cabbage, cauliflower, cucumbers, peppers, and tomatoes.
□ Plant cabbage, cauliflowers, Brussels sprouts and kale before mid-month.
□ Direct seed pole and bush beans and midseason sweet corn. Sow pumpkin and squash toward end of month.
□ Make successive plantings at 10-day intervals.
□ Plant potatoes in well-drained, fertile soil.
□ Thin plants already in garden, and continue cultivation and weeding.
□ Stop cutting asparagus after the middle of the month.
Grow 80 vegetables: THE KITCHEN GARDEN GROWERS' GUIDE
Never Miss a New Post subscribe to Harvest to Table by entering your email:
Harvest to Table's New Encyclopedia:
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide
A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide is a how-to guide on planting, growing, and preparing more than eighty vegetables and herbs. This handy home companion is perfect for avid cooks, foodies, and both beginning and expert small scale vegetable gardeners.
Send This Entry To A Friend
Link to this page
Bookmark this page using the following link:
http://www.harvestwizard.com/2009/05/warm_region_kitchen_garden_alm_1.html
Do you have a website?
You can place a link to this page by copying and pasting the code below.
<a href="http://www.harvestwizard.com/2009/05/warm_region_kitchen_garden_alm_1.html">Warm Region Kitchen Garden Almanac for May</a>
Never Miss a Garden Tip!
Just enter your email address and you will subscribe to "Harvest To Table" Web site updates via email for free. Make sure you confirm your subscription from the confirmation message you'll receive in your mailbox right away.
Most Popular
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Lima Beans
- AnnM on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Lima Beans
- anna on How to Grow Lima Beans
- alex linssey markinmy on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Lima Beans
- tine on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Anonymous on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Potatoes
- amy on How to Grow Potatoes
- Durgan on How to Grow Potatoes
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Potatoes
- Anonymous on How to Grow Potatoes
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Potatoes
- katrina on How to Grow Potatoes
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- charlie b on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- james on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- james on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Mary Bender on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- hugh means on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- leongks on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Celery
- Sandi on How to Grow Celery
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Celery
- Flo on How to Grow Celery
- Stephen Albert on Melon Growing Problems: Troubleshooting
- John on Melon Growing Problems: Troubleshooting
- Stephen Albert on Beans: Harvest and Storage
- Holly on Beans: Harvest and Storage
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- mutuelle on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Sue Parker on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Corinne Whitfield on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- mary on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- matt on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- keith on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Carman on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Chinese Vegetables: Warm-Season Varieties
- Trent on Chinese Vegetables: Warm-Season Varieties
- Toleomas on Chinese Vegetables: Warm-Season Varieties
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Radish
- Kathy on How to Grow Radish
- Stephen Albert on Growing Mint
- Chris and Growing Mint on Growing Mint
Subscribe by RSS


Leave a comment