


Laugh? Cry? I don't know which I should do!
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I'm in the same boat here in IL pretty much. I will plant in beginning of May (praying we don't get a week of downpours again that floods my garden). I can grow into early September for warm loving plants like tomatoes and and peppers. Cold hardy plants make it a bit longer.![]()
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Laugh? Cry? I don't know which I should do!
AZ is in a drought but our community encourages us to collect rain water and use it.It's likely because the water table in those areas is extremely low. Areas like parts of Colorado and California are at risk of or already suffering extreme drought. Collecting rainwater and preventing it from replenishing the water table can speed up the problem. That said, you would think that collecting rainwater in closed vessels prevents evaporation loss and it would add to the water table once it's used. The problem there is much of it could go down drains from home use or get contaminated with pesticides and other chemical agents from the way it's used before entering the water table. With a low water table, contaminants would have a larger impact. The theory then is let nature take its course and stay out of its way.
They are the old fashioned standby, hearty, proven as reliable tomatoes in the greater Ohio Valley Zone. Early girl is what I would pick if I had to pick of the two.Any specific reasons you like those two? I'm hard limiting myself to one variety, because I already know I'm planting Supersteak Hybrids, Black Krims, Cherokee Purples, and two different sauce varieties. And cherry. So I'm trying to do as much research as possible.
Nice that you’re handy that way!Oven quit working last night . So I put a new igniter in today . Always something to fix .
Ya I hear ya. We can get frost into June, and again into mid Sept. That's if the giant mutant hail or hurricane force winds and rain don't take it all out at critical times.Wow... I'm jealous! I get 100ish days, max, for tomatoes. Might be 120 days between last and first frost, but not reliable and chilly enough that 'maters won't do much.
I did find some very short season varieties that said 58-62 days. They're determinate varieties, and I'm going to plant them in "downhill" garden that can have much cooler nights than my "uphill" garden. Be interesting to see how they do; they're all new to me.
plant in beginning of May
Apposing theories... I'm not saying which is right or wrong.AZ is in a drought but our community encourages us to collect rain water and use it.
Could be the different climate.Apposing theories... I'm not saying which is right or wrong.![]()