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Cauliflower Easy to Increase Knowledge
Plants

Cauliflower Easy to Increase Knowledge

Cauliflower can be finicky in the garden. Follower these cauliflower growing tips for a good harvest. Sowing and Transplanting Cauliflower Cauliflower requires slow, steady growth in cool weather. Hot weather will cause cauliflower to bolt or button up (cold weather will also cause cauliflower to button—not form full-sized heads). Start cauliflower in early spring 4-6

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Learn Learn how to Expand Celery from Seed
Plants

Learn Learn how to Expand Celery from Seed

Celery is a cool-season crop. It grows best where daytime temperatures are consistently greater than 55°F (13°C) but not consistently warmer than 80°F (26°C). Where temperatures are very warm, celery will grow stringy; where temperatures fall below 50°F, celery will send up flower stalks and become bitter flavored. Start celery indoors 14 to 6 weeks

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Be informed About Cabbage Types and Sorts
Plants

Be informed About Cabbage Types and Sorts

Choose cabbage varieties for planting based on the flavor you want to serve–and where you live. There are several varieties of cabbage. Here are the types of cabbage you can grow and varieties to choose from. Savoy cabbage Savoy cabbage leaves (crinkled leaves) are more pliable than smooth cabbage. They are sweet and mild-flavored, easy

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Cold Local weather Kale Best possible Sorts
Plants

Cold Local weather Kale Best possible Sorts

Kale is a versatile autumn and winter vegetable. A good frost will sweeten kale overnight. At the same time, kale can withstand most winters in the garden with no protection. It’s hardy to 10°F. Kale growing tips at: How to Grow Kale. Best kale varieties to grow There are a couple of dozen different varieties

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Sorts of Cold Frames to Prolong the Season
Plants

Sorts of Cold Frames to Prolong the Season

A cold frame can keep plants from 7° to 10ºF warmer than outdoors, sometimes as much as 20ºF warmer. Use a cold frame in spring to give seedlings a head start on the growing season and protect them from spring frosts. Use a cold frame in autumn to extend the summer and fall growing season

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Huge Row Vegetable Garden Beds
Plants

Huge Row Vegetable Garden Beds

A wide garden row is ideal for growing leaf and small root crops. For easy planting and maintenance grow lettuce, spinach, radishes, and carrots in rows the width of a standard 15-inch bow rake. A wide row also can be used for medium-sized crops such as cabbages, bush beans, and eggplants grown two across. Wide

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Winter or Late-Season Apple Sorts
Plants

Winter or Late-Season Apple Sorts

There are more than 7,000 varieties of apples but not all of them come to harvest at the same time. In the course of a year, there are actually three apple harvests: an early-season harvest, a mid-season harvest, and a late-season harvest. The harvest for early-season apple varieties begins in mid-summer and peaks in late

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Winter Melons: Selection – Harvest to Table
Plants

Winter Melons: Selection – Harvest to Table

Casaba melon Honeydew, casaba and Cavaillon melons are classed as winter melons because they ripen more slowly than other melons and are usually not ready until late fall. After harvest, they even continue to ripen in storage. Choose. Honeydews should have a smooth, evenly yellow rind that is slightly green at the stem end. Look

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Wintry climate Squash and Pumpkin Varieties
Plants

Wintry climate Squash and Pumpkin Varieties

Butternut Squash Winter squashes are best from early fall through winter. Winter squashes are drier, more fibrous, and much sweeter than summer squashes. Their thick, hard shells can not be eaten—like summer squashes, but these squashes can be stored into the winter and almost into the early spring. The sweet flesh of winter squash becomes

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Wintry climate Squash Sorts – Harvest to Table
Plants

Wintry climate Squash Sorts – Harvest to Table

Acorn Squash Winter squashes are best from early fall through winter. Winter squashes are drier, more fibrous, and much sweeter than summer squashes. The thick, hard shells of winter squashes can not be eaten, but the shells add to the period these squashes can be stored—ranging from 30 to 180 days. In addition to the

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