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I don't recall it taking anywhere near that long but I guess anything could be possible. Okra is very heat and dry tolerant and very low maintenance for a high yield plant. That just doesn't seem right.
It was an older man. I do agree it is low maintenance high yield but picking is where the time comes in. Kinda like beans, easy to grow but too much time to pick for market. Look around the farmers market. Even @ big markets I see maybe 1 in 10 or 15 vendors selling okra. If it was that easy everyone would be selling it!
Surely the container was not a one gallon bucket, but a much larger one. Hubby's fathers sold over 1000 pounds one season to a local grocery store for 97 cents a pound. The problem with okra is the pods "wilt" quickly after picking and begin to change color. The little spines make your skin itch. He picked every other day and had several bushels a week. He could pick a 5 gallon bucket in about 45 minutes.
I don't recall it taking anywhere near that long but I guess anything could be possible. Okra is very heat and dry tolerant and very low maintenance for a high yield plant. That just doesn't seem right.
It was an older man. I do agree it is low maintenance high yield but picking is where the time comes in. Kinda like beans, easy to grow but too much time to pick for market. Look around the farmers market. Even @ big markets I see maybe 1 in 10 or 15 vendors selling okra. If it was that easy everyone would be selling it!
Surely the container was not a one gallon bucket, but a much larger one. Hubby's fathers sold over 1000 pounds one season to a local grocery store for 97 cents a pound. The problem with okra is the pods "wilt" quickly after picking and begin to change color. The little spines make your skin itch. He picked every other day and had several bushels a week. He could pick a 5 gallon bucket in about 45 minutes.