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| Zinnias, basil and tomatoes planted in garden bed |
Victory Garden on the Golf Course
Saturday, June 13, 2026
What's happening in the mid June garden
Monday, June 8, 2026
Summer Edible Gardening Tips

Zinnias and basil in June garden
Monday, June 8, 2026
The summer loving edibles from the tropics love summer time. Eggplant, cucumber and squash plants seem to grow inches every day in hot, humid weather! The crops from temperate regions like peppers, tomatoes, beans, peppers and Mediterranean herbs are also growing quite well. The humidity brings higher risk of disease and the lack of rain during peak summer heat can put a damper on garden production.
To keep your plants thriving and your harvests at their peak, here are a few tips for summer edibles:
1. Harvest frequently! Plants are in the business of reproducing. Their entire life is dedicated to giving the best possible chance of maintaining more plants for the future. The more you harvest, the more babies the plant will produce. I have noticed that my cucumber plant can only support one large cucumber on each vine. As soon as I pick the big one, you can see one of the small ones jump in size by the very next day! Harvest in the morning for peak juiciness of fruits and in the afternoon for peak concentration of flavor in summer loving herbs.
2. Mulch your beds. The mulch keeps the moisture from evaporating, allowing more infrequent watering. It also moderates the temperature of the soil so it doesn’t get baking hot. I use natural wood mulch in both my garden beds and pots.
3. Water consistently. The cause of cracked fruits is inconsistent water. The plant gets used to very little water and when deluged the fruit’s skin can’t expand fast enough and the fruit cracks. Inconsistent watering can also cause blossom end rot. Over watering can be a problem, too. Too much water will cause your fruits to be tasteless and mushy. If in the ground, your plants need either a good soaking rain each week or a deep watering (1" total per week). I use soaker hoses in my mulched garden beds. It is best to water in the morning; you get maximum absorption (biggest bang for your water buck). For pots, you will likely need to water 3 times per week during the height of summer heat. I like pots with a water reservoir built in the bottom so I don’t have to water them as often.
4. Do not water the foliage of your nightshade plants (tomatoes, potatoes, squash, watermelon, and cucumbers)! They are very susceptible to fungal diseases and water on their leaves encourages fungal growth. It is recommended to spray every 7-14 days for natural fungicides on all nightshade plants when the risk for fungal disease starts. In our Zone 7 garden, late May is not too early to start preventative spraying if you are growing varieties that are susceptible. Natural fungicides include Copper, Serenade and Southern Ag.
5. Fertilize monthly with side dressing of compost or slow-release fertilizer. Fertilizer should be covered with soil to keep the nitrogen from off gassing. It is also a good idea to add minerals to the soil annually. You can purchase minerals just for gardening. I like to rotate between Azomite and kelp meal. If your plants have more minerals, their fruits will too!
6. Pick insects off daily. Keep a close eye on your plants to you can stop an infestation before it gets started. If I do get a really bad infestation, I will use diacotomus earth (DE) or insecticidal soap. It is organic and not a chemical. Some people even eat DE! DE works by scratching the exoskeleton of the insects which leads to dehydration and death. Be careful, though, as it will kill good bugs too. I use it very sparingly and only if desperate. A few bugs don’t eat much : ) Another option is the use of light covers to keep the bugs from your plants.
7. Keep any diseased leaves groomed from your plants and do not compost them. Diseases can be killed if your compost pile is hot enough but if not at high enough temperature and duration, disease will survive composting. I haven’t progressed far enough yet in my composting skills to trust I am getting the pile hot enough and I don’t want to spread diseases to all my plants. I put any diseased leaves and plants in the trash.
8. Compost. For all the trimmings from the garden and the kitchen, start a compost pile or get an indoor composter. I have used both. I had an indoor Naturemill electric composter in the garage and an outdoor tumbler for all the kitchen scraps. Right now, I am using the outdoor insulated stainless tumbler.
9. Succession plant. Summer veggies can get tired by the end of the season or overcome with disease. A strategy to make sure you have an abundant harvest all the way through fall is to plant a second round of the heavy producers like summer squash, tomatoes, and cucumbers. End of June is a great time to get a second round of summer lovers going.
10. Provide shade. If you live an area with scorching heat and sun, even the summer lovers would benefit from some afternoon shade. Tomato and pepper fruits can get sunburned, called sun scald. Many eggplant varieties can get thick skins and a more bitter taste in intense heat and sun. Even in our Zone 7 garden, I have experienced all these. You can move potted plants or plant on the southeast side to get your veggies some afternoon shade. I did try shade cloth one year for my lettuce, but the plants did not seem to thrive in our Zone 7 garden under shade cloth cover. I plant all my eggplant and pepper plants in pots that get afternoon shade.
Sunday, June 7, 2026
What to plant in the June edible garden
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| Potted eggplant with petunia Sunday, June 7, 2026 |
Mustard
Onions
Parsley
Parsnips
Peas, Southern
For lettuce substitute, I am growing sprouting broccoli and a sweet Chinese cabbage, Hilton, along with orach, multi colored amaranth, cultivated dandelion greens, arugula and chard. All can be sown now.
For spinach substitute, I am growing Perpetual Spinach, Red Malabar spinach, Japanese Mountain Spinach chard, and New Zealand spinach. They all thrive in hot weather. Malabar spinach is a vine so give it a trellis to climb. It is quite pretty with its maroon stems and flowers.
Give your greens the coolest spot in the garden and moisture to keep them sweet and succulent. You can use taller plants to give them shade as well. Growing summer salads
For tips on starting your seeds in the garden: Outdoor seed starting tips I also like to put a pot or two on our covered deck and start seeds there. Once they are to a good size, transplant them into their permanent pot or into the garden bed. Be sure your seedlings are hardened off as the heat and sun can be intense this time of year. "Hardening off" seedlings I like to plant on a cloudy day when rain is being called for the next day.
In June, the days are getting hot and the rains usually don't come as often. Be sure to water your new plants when it gets dry or they start to wilt. Summer garden tips
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Growing melons 101
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| Burpee "Bush Sugar Baby" watermelon |
For cantaloupes, you can start seed indoors 6-8 weeks before the last frost, buy transplants or start directly in the garden. For planting directly in the garden, plant seeds in late spring/early summer when soil temperature has reached 65 degrees F on hills, 4-5' apart.
For watermelons, you can sow indoors 3-4 weeks before the last frost, sow seeds directly in the garden when all danger of frost has passed or buy transplants. Watermelons like a light soil so if you have heavy clay, amend soil with organic material to loosen and make hills 4-6" high. Harvest after first tendril nearest the fruit turns brown and the underside of the melon turns from light green to a butter yellow. Some can tell by thumping on the melon if it is ripe. A hollow sound means it is ready to pick and eat! Watermelon seed is viable for 6 years.
Melons will cross with one another so if you want to keep pure seed, either plant only one variety or separate varieties by a half mile.
I have grown compact watermelons that can even be grown in a pot! It is called "Bush Sugar Baby". Being a bush type, it will stay compact and not have a vine that runs long. It gets up to 2' tall and 2-3' wide and is ready to harvest in 80 days. Each plant bears 2, 12 pound melons. In my garden, a fun little melon called Tigger grows very well.
Melons love the hot weather so I wait until it is summer like before starting seed or transplanting. Melons prefer soil temperatures of 70-95F. If you want to sow directly in the garden, now would be a good time in our area. I started my melons outdoors in a peat pot about a month ago. We have gotten so much rain I couldn't get into the garden spot where they go until a few days ago. I had to put out straw and wear rain boots to get them planted! They should do well now as our temperatures are pretty consistently in the 80's now.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
June 2026 Edible Garden Planner
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| Potted edibles and flowers in the June garden |
Another great thing about herbs is they are a good deterrent to deer. Deer do not like strong smells so avoid fragrant herbs. I plant them and marigolds all around the garden to keep the pesky critters away. We now live out in the country and deer will even bed down in the yard. What has worked to keep them out of the garden is a combination of herbs throughout the garden, thyme that edges all my beds, a pod deer deterrent, WD40 on socks, and marigolds around the perimeter of the garden bed. I added daffodils last year to repel voles.
| Flowering chives |
I went with Purple Yard Long pole beans with a couple new varieties and 1500 Year Old bean for fresh snap beans this year. The Purple Yard Long are crazy productive and I just like growing a bean that was here 1500 years ago. I am also growing the Lima bean Christmas Speckles. I prefer pole beans because you get so much from one plant and they produce over the entire summer. I grow them on a trellis so they are easy to harvest. The advantage of bush beans is that the harvest duration is short so you don't have to worry about picking fresh beans all summer. Everything you need to know to grow green (or yellow or purple) beans
For summer squash, I am growing 2 kinds, Trombetta and Zapallito del Tronco. Trombetta can be used as a summer squash or left on the vine to ripen as a winter squash. It was impervious to pest and disease in my garden. The Zapallito is also supposed to be disease resistant so I am trying it this year. What to do with all that zucchini?!
Overwintered carrots are flowering. Egyptian walking onions Egyptian walking onions. are filling out well. I am harvesting the walking onion any time I need onions for cooking. The green stalk is great as a fresh chive, too, for salads or potatoes. I started some garlic seed last fall and it looks like all of them came up! They will be too small to harvest this year. I'll leave them in the ground until next year.
Now is the time to provide shade for your lettuce and sow bolt resistant varieties like Summer Crisp Magenta, Green Towers, Butter King, Jericho Romaine, Simpson Elite leaf and Giant Blue Feather. The Butter King and Red Sails stay sweet even after it has bolted. You can move your lettuces if in pots to a shadier part of your patio or porch. Shade cloths can be used for those in the garden. You can also plant taller veggies on the south and west side of your lettuces so as they grow, they provide shade to the lettuces. I move most of my greens around to the northeast, shady side of the house this time of the year to keep them sweet as long as possible. Be sure to keep them moist as this helps prolong the harvest.
For more tips on preserving the extra, see Preservation garden
For more on summer garden care, Summer garden tips
| Summer greens and herbs |
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| Savory, thyme, lettuce, onions with day lilies in the background |
Decorative container gardening for edibles
Get the most from your space-plant intensively!
You can garden year round in small space
Start a kitchen herb garden!





