- Tomatoes love as much sun as possible! This depends on where you live. In very hot climates, 6-8 hours is plenty. Your tomatoes can actually scald in intense sun and heat. My Cherokee Purple tomatoes had many tomatoes scalded with the last heat wave we had. For hot climates, plant your tomatoes in a north to south row so each side gets some shade each day.
- You should prune your tomatoes for the best harvests. This again depends on your climate. If you live in a hot climate with intense sun and heat, you want to keep the leaves to help protect the tomatoes from sun scald. If you live in a damp area, you want to prune the tomato plant to allow good air circulation and sunlight to help prevent disease. Our climate is hot and humid. I do limited pruning to ensure good air circulation. Tomatoes 101, everything you need to know to grow great tomatoes
- Tomatoes love fertilizer! Actually, you only want to fertilize when you plant, again when the plant flowers and monthly after that. Too much nitrogen encourages leaf growth. Some that really sock the nitrogen fertilizer to the plant end up with a giant green plant with no tomatoes. To help with flowering, fruiting and blossom end rot, be sure to get a fertilizer with plenty of phosphorous and calcium or one specifically for tomatoes. There are many fertilizers available just for tomatoes. How to care for the summer edible garden
- Tomatoes can’t be grown in pots. Tomatoes can be grown in pots, but not the big tomato plants or you have to grow them in a very large container like a half whiskey barrel. Look for dwarf, pot, or patio types to plant in medium size pots. You will need to be prepared to water often. Compact tomatoes for small spaces and pots
- Tomatoes need to be watered a lot. Actually, if you water your tomatoes a lot, you can end up with fungal diseases and mushy fruit. The trick with tomatoes is to keep their moisture even. Letting the ground crack and then drowning the plant will result in cracked fruit. In the hot times of the summer with no rain, you will likely need to water at least weekly for those in the ground and 2-3 times a week for those in pots. Be sure to not water the leaves, but the roots. Quick tips on summer edible garden watering
- When you see leaves dropping, something is wrong. This is a natural progression of the plant. As fruits begin to form, there is less energy for the leaves and some leaves will turn yellow and die.
- A spindly tomato transplant is an unhealthy one. Actually the nodes on the stems can easily be transformed into roots. I take my transplants and remove the bottom leaves and plant deeply or on its side with only the top 4 leaves above ground. Roots will grow all along the stem buried in the soil. This gives the plant a good root system.
- You can only transplant in early summer. Actually, if your tomato plants are starting to fade in mid summer, you can put out new transplants that will give you fruit until the first frost. June is a great time to start new tomato plants.
- When you make sauce, the skins and seeds have to be removed. I put whole tomatoes into the food processor. This saves so much time! Some say that the skin and seeds can impart a bitter flavor. With the many types of tomatoes I have raised, this has never been a problem for me. Preserving the tomato harvest
- Only paste tomatoes can be used for sauce. I use all my extra tomatoes for sauce. The best for sauce for me are the most prolific tomato plants. These have been smaller tomatoes and Cherokee Purple for us. I would ask your neighbors which ones give the most fruit if you are looking to put up by freezing or canning. You may have to cook the sauce longer to get the thickness you want over all paste tomatoes. I like to have one paste tomato in each quart bag that I freeze to give a silky texture to my soups and sauces. Choosing which tomatoes to grow
Victory Garden on the Golf Course
Monday, June 30, 2025
Top 10 Tomato Myths (And Some Truths)
Sunday, June 29, 2025
How to care for the summer edible garden
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Potted eggplant and petunia |
- Harvest frequently! Plants are in the business of reproducing. Their entire life is dedicated to giving the best possible chance of supplying 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 or two large cucumbers on each vine. As soon as I pick the big ones, 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 flavor of summer loving herbs.
- 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. Weed free, self fertilizing, till free garden beds
- 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 or just rot and die. 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 to avoid jungle diseases; you also 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 or I use very large catch pans.
- Do not water the foliage of your nightshade plants! 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 (tomatoes, potatoes, squash, watermelon, and cucumbers) when the risk for fungal disease starts. In our Zone 7 garden, late May is not too early to start preventative spraying. A few natural fungicides I have used are Copper, Serenade and Southern Ag as a preventative.
- Fertilize monthly with side dressing of compost or slow release fertilizer. 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! The next step in garden production and your nutrition-soil minerals
- 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 an 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, only if desperate and keep it away from the flowers. A few bugs don’t eat much : ) Another option is the use of light covers to keep the bugs from your plants. Natural, organic pest strategies and how to make your own bug sprays
- 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.
- Compost. For all the trimmings from the garden and the kitchen, start a compost pile or get an indoor composter. I have both. I have 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 steel tumbler. Troubleshooting your compost pile
- 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, beginning of July is a great time to get a second round of summer lovers going. Keep the harvest going, do succession planting
- 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, but the plants did not seem to thrive in our Zone 7 garden under shade cloth cover.
Sunday, June 22, 2025
Time to plant pumpkin seed!

The cucumber beetle can infect the plant with a bacterial disease called wilt or cucumber mosaic virus. The cucumber beetles we get here look like yellow/green lady bugs (left). There are also striped varieties (below).

Saturday, June 21, 2025
Everything you need to know to grow okra, in the garden or pot
Red Burgundy okra flower |
Early July garden with okra and zinnias in the background, chard in the foreground |
Baby red okras |
Dwarf okra plant in foreground |
Sunday, June 15, 2025
What to plant now in the June edible garden
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Potted eggplant with petunia Sunday, June 15, 2025 |
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 moist 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 14, 2025
What's in my 2025 garden
I made a plan in December of what I would plant in my garden this year. There are always changes to the plan as seeds don't sprout or I see a really beautiful flower I want to add to the garden. So, here is what I ended up with in my garden beds and pots. There will be a few minor changes as summer chugs along, but by this time, the plants are pretty well set for this year's summer season.
My garden consists of four parts: the perennials that come back year after year in the same spots and pots, the self-seeders that pop up in different spots, the stand by annuals I plant every year, and the new varieties I try each year.
Perennials
Existing perennials in my garden are herbs (thyme, tarragon, oregano, garden chives, garlic chives, spearmint, lemon balm, horseradish), vegetables (Egyptian walking onions, sweet Egyptian walking onion, potato onion, shallots, Elephant garlic, asparagus, sorrel), the fruits (strawberries, blackberries, raspberries, Aronia bush, goji berry), and the flowers (daylilies, peonies, hydrangeas, daffodils, hellebore, surprise lilies, gladiolas, coreopsis, hollyhocks, jasmine vine).
New perennials are herbs (marjoram, winter savory, ringed all my beds with a variety of creeping thyme to keep away voles and deer, rosemary, woad, a variety of sages, a variety of lavenders, woad), vegetables (Violetta and Colorado Red Star artichokes, Jerusalem artichokes, American groundnut, pink dandelion), fruits (Alpine strawberries-Italian and Alexandria, elderberries-York and Johns, overbearing strawberries into a raised bed) and decorative plants (Sweet William around front bed, Aubrieta Whitewell Gem, Alyssum Gold Dust, Sunrise Lupine, a Summer Blues delphinium grandiflorum, a lime green creeping sedum, Grace Ward lithodora, Snow in Summer, Paprika yarrow, Blue eyed grass, blue fescue grass, and pink muhly grass, daffodils, hyacinths, Endless Summer hydrangea, David Austin roses, Utrecht Blue wheat).
I planted way more perennials than usual this year because we put in new flower beds around the addition to the house. Next year, instead of 400 new plants, it will be more like 10 to fill in the spaces where some of the new ones didn't make it.
Self-seeders
The ones from last year that came back again this year are zinnias, amaranths (Love Lies Bleeding and Chinese Bicolor), Cocks comb, carrots, celery, purple sprouting broccoli, Hummingbird vine, Morning glory, Ground Cherry, Red Malabar spinach, New Zealand spinach and Giant Blue Feather lettuce. I did also get different varieties of other lettuces popping up here and there that I transplanted into pots.
The new self seeders that I planted this year are new colors of zinnias, borage, and Magadi Compact Blue lobelia.
Edibles and Herbs
Pole Beans-1500 Year Old snap or shelled beans, Christmas speckles lima beans, Purple and Red Chinese Noodle beans, Urizun Japanese winged beans. All but the winged bean will be in the garden bed.
Okra-Red Burgundy (2)
Tomato plants (10) -Italian Pear paste, Cherokee Purple, Chocolate Pear, Brandywine, Ukranian Purple, Lucid Gem, Rebel Starfighter, a yellow Sicilian storage tomato, Better Boy, Sweetheart Cherry, Topcoat dwarf, A'Grappoli winter storage tomato
Eggplant (4)-Rotanda Bianca, Shiromaru, Amadea, Turkish Orange in pots
Cucumber (2) – Bush Champion and Beit Alpha vining cucumber
Summer squash-Trombetta since it is resistant to vine borer and squash bugs.
Winter squash – Butternut from saved seed and a new one
Snow peas in pots with peppers and eggplants
Dragon Tail radish in garden bed
Hilton Chinese cabbage
Lettuce (Royal Oakleaf, Grand Rapids, Butter King, Bronze Beauty, Giant Blue Feather, Red Romaine), spinach, chard, blood veined sorrel in pots
Snow peas in pots with peppers and eggplants
Greens that stay sweet in summer-Purple Orach, Chinese Bicolor Spinach, Tong Ho Big Leaf, Chijimisai, Japanese Mountain Spinach chard, Tronchuda kale.
Sweet and hot peppers-variety to make chili powder (3 Ancho plants), Jigsaw and Baklouti hot pepper plants, and sweet pepper plants (a chocolate one, yellow banana, bells-an orange, Baron red, a Better Bell green and a Golden Wonder yellow, sweet Habanada and sweet Tricked You Jalapeño)
Herbs-Dill, Basil (Nunum, Genovese, Cardinal, Purple Ball), Lion's Ear, Rosemary, Multicolor Sage, Papalo (cilantro substitute), Roselle Red hibiscus, a variety of onions (Flat of Italy, Australian Brown, Bronze D'Amposta, Red of Florence and sweet onion sets from Walmart)
Potatoes in the potato boxes - Yukon Gold, purple ones from saved seeds (yes, some potatoes actually develop seeds from their flowers)
Sweet potatoes-Purple Majesty, orange Beauregard and White Bonita variety pack from Southern Exposure
Dwarf Tamarillo-small orange fruits
Pumpkin-Ayote Green Flesh for pies and bread
Melons-Maybe Prescott Fond Blanc, Kajari or Lemon Drop?
Vole repelling plants around the perimeter of all my beds-creeping thyme and daffodils around every bed
Monday, June 9, 2025
What's happening in the early June edible garden
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Zinnias, basil and tomatoes planted in garden bed |