April 25, 2009
The tomatoes are busy setting fruit in my Houston vegetable garden. This year I planted all the tomatoes together so I could do a good test on varieties of slicer tomatoes. Previously, I have followed the general recommendation of scattering them around the garden. While good for disease control it limits comparison because of the variability of sunlight and some differences in the soil. I planted Homestead, Merced, Floramerica and Celebrity as well as the cherry/plum tomato Sweet Chelsea (far left in the picture).

Sweet Chelsea is indeterminate to put it mildly and quickly takes over half the garden. The others are determinate, which I generally think are best for growing tomatoes in Houston. Homestead is a heirloom variety that we used to raise commercially when I was a kid growing up in Lavaca County. So far all are doing well, but I think Homestead is moving to the front in terms of production and Celebrity is lagging behind. Merced was the first to set fruit and has the largest tomatoes. I plant to measure production of each variety and do a taste test.
In the background you can see the corn I started indoors in now tasseling. On the left you can the parsley going to seed. I am letting practically everything (arugula, cilantro, bok choi, mustard and lettuce) go to seed. The flowers are good to have to attract beneficial insects and I plan to save the seeds. I planted a couple of the Osaka Purple Mustard seed and they seem to have come up true. Of course, hybrid seed will no come true and is hard to know what will and will not. The butterfly iris in the foreground has been beautiful this spring.
April 6, 2009
I pulled out the sugar snaps today. It was a record crop, but mildew had about finished the plants. They were about finished anyhow and were putting too much shade on the corn. I have not found an acceptable way to control mildew on sugar snaps.
We have a threat of frost tonight, but I think we will be ok in the central area. The temperature is still in the 50s at 10 pm and the wind is blowing. I watered well but did not put the frost cloth back on–what a year of weather.
Quite a few little tomatoes. Merced set fruit first but the others are not far behind. Plants look really good. Corn is also doing well. Cilantro, arugula and parsley are all blooming and bringing in beneficial insects. Tomorrow I will mulch the blackberries with newspapers and some hay I brought back from the ranch. Beans did germinate well in spite of the cold spell when I planted them
The wonderful Contessa onions and the leeks are now ready. We had a salad tonight of the onions with avocados and cherry tomatoes–wonderful. The avocado from Costco are great, but they need a few days to ripen.
March 16, 2009
All the spring crops are planted and the final harvest of the winter Houston vegetable garden is about complete. I planted the beans last week right before the cold snap. Hopefully, the seed did not rot; I am sure they did not germinate. But, warm weather is here now. Not much to do now except watch things grow.
Sugar snap peas are in full production; they liked the cooler weather. Probably a record crop this year. Hardly any vegetable is better to grow in terms of upgrade from the supermarket. Onions and leeks are developing nicely, but it will be another month or so. Parsley, cilantro and arugula are going to seed. Bush tomatoes are blooming.
The corn I started indoors is really kicking the seed planted outside. Not only is it further developed, but the plants are stronger. Certainly the way to go from now on.
March 1, 2009
Time to get rid of the last of the winter vegetables in your Houston vegetable garden and plant the spring crop. Last week I planted the tomatoes from pots into the ground and yesterday put frost cloth around them for the cold weekend. See previous post on how to do this ( http://www.houstonvegetablegarden.com/index.php/2008/02/07/growing-tomatoes-in-houston-cont/) I planted some corn in the garden and some under the grow light. I hope the warm weather last week was sufficient to germinate the triple sweet varieties which require soil temperatures of at least 65. The seed under the light came up almost at once with 100% germination. They need to be put in the garden but I will wait until it warms up a bit tomorrow. Corn develops large roots fast so the starter flat gets overwhelmed rather quickly.
I still have some beets and carrots to pull before I plant the beans. They should go in next week sometime.
Still overwhelmed with lettuce–having been giving it to anyone in sight. Sugar snap peas should be ready this week.
Parsley and cilantro are started to bloom and seed. Their blooms attract beneficial insects as well provide the seed for next years crop. They will reseed indefinitely, but be careful not to over mulch after the seed have fallen.
January 31, 2009
Tomorrow is February 1 and time to start thinking of the spring Houston vegetable garden. I transplanted my tomatoes to large pots today and will set them in the garden later in February with frost cloth around them.
Every lettuce seed I planted in the flat seems to have come up twice. I have set out about 15 plants and reluctantly tossed the rest.
Sugar snaps are growing well. The beets and carrots are being picked. I may be pushed to find spots to plant the beans, corn and tomatoes. Speaking of corn I ordered some triple sweet varieties to plant. Two varieties–Honey Select and Serendipity–are now recommended by the Extension Service. Park Seed offers a 3-fer package of those two plus Revelation, a very early maturing variety. So I will try their three-fer deal. I have not any extra sugar types before but other gardeners have told me that they are difficult here, but I thought I would find out for myself.
January 5, 2009
Seems rather a cold day to be thinking of tomatoes for the Houston spring vegetable garden, but it is time to start the seed indoors. In posts from last year I described the method so I won’t repeat. This year I planted 2 of my remaining Merced seed. Merced is (or was) a great tomato for here but no one sells the seed any more. I also planted Sweet Chelsea, Floramerica, Celebrity and Homestead. I have not tried Floramerica before but it is recommended for the area. I gave up on Champion after last year. It is recommended here by various experts but I have never had good luck with it. Homestead is an old variety that we raised commercially when I was a kid so it has been around for a while. I have not planted it in many years–will be interesting. I normally plant Sun Gold, but found that I had run out of seed.
The seed will probably come up in 3 or 4 days and be ready to transplant to 4″ pots in a couple of weeks. I will then put them in gallon pots before ultimately planting them in the garden in mid February. In the old days on the farm we started the seed in “hot beds” and transplanted to “cold frames” before finally planting them in the field. We raised about an acre. It was hard manual labor but at least the work was in a pleasant time of the year. The market collapsed in the early 1950s when mechanized planting in the Rio Grande Valley started.
I also threw is a few lettuce seed to get a late crop. The lettuce planted in October is now in full production. The mustard greens are about finished, but it has been a great crop. I really like the Osaka purple; beautiful plant and a nice milder flavor. I will let it flower out and save the seed, but I am not sure if the seeds will come back true or not. The collards planted later are now producing well–may be sick of greens by the time the winter is over. Parsley and cilantro are everywhere from reseeding. Next year I will try to find some chervil seed. Chervil is from the same family and has a mild licorice flavor.
I planted my remained turnip seed to get a second crop. The Royal Crown turnip seems to be an improvement over the regular purple top. The turnips stayed sweet even when they got quite large.