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    Home»Lifestyle»A Step-by-Step Guide to Planting Your Summer Vegetables
    Lifestyle

    A Step-by-Step Guide to Planting Your Summer Vegetables

    By Staff WriterMay 17, 20256 Mins Read
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    Vegetable plants are expensive. To get the best yield out of them, you need to pay attention to more than just the soil, sun, and watering. You need to get your plants off on the right foot by planting them the right way. Here’s what I mean.

    Choose the right plant at the nursery

    Tomatoes at the nursery


    Credit: Amanda Blum

    When I first started gardening, I thought the best vegetable starts to buy were the ones that were the biggest, with flowers and fruit already on them. This would give the plant a head start, right? 

    Sadly, no. Plants go through something called “transplant shock” when you move them. You’re disturbing the plant’s roots, and moving it to a new environment. To survive, the plant needs to focus all its energy on the plant’s roots, and if there’s a lot of plant matter like leaves, flowers, and fruit to support, energy is wasted supporting them. Plants with established fruit, in particular, struggle during the transplant process. Choose plants that look healthy, with strong stems and leaves without damage, but that don’t yet have flowers or fruit.

    Prepare your soil

    Shovel in raised bed dirt


    Credit: Amanda Blum

    There are legions of ways to handle your garden from season to season. Some people till the soil, while others employ a no-till method, and still others use something called “chop-and-drop.” Regardless of the method, the soil you’re planting into has to be pliable enough that roots can flourish in them. For that reason, ensure that the soil is turned over and broken up—from a shovel to a shovel and a half’s depth. You can use a broadfork for this, if you don’t want to disturb the soil structure, but otherwise, just use a shovel. Breaking up the soil will help you see the texture—so you can add sand if the soil has too much clay in it, or compost if it isn’t holding any moisture. You can use this time to add amendments such as vegetable fertilizer and lime. Fertilizer is obvious, but lime is used to turn your soil less acidic, which happens over time through watering and growing. Most vegetables don’t enjoy acidic environments. Turn the amendments into the soil. 

    Choose an overcast day

    Your plants will already be stressed by transplanting. Planting them into the blazing sun is even more stress. A stretch of overcast days is the perfect planting time. If that’s not an option, plant at twilight to give your plants a night to adjust. Consider giving the plant some shade the next day to help it acclimate.

    Get the plant out of the pot without damaging the roots

    Eggplant in plastic pot


    Credit: Amanda Blum

    By the time plants reach the nursery, they’re often root-bound in the plastic pots or six packs you buy them in. Roots are resilient, but you don’t want to disturb them more than necessary. The best way to break a plant free from a plastic pot is to use two fingers and squeeze the bottom of the pot. This should free the plant. Don’t turn the pot over or pound on it with your palm, and definitely don’t try to pull it loose by the plant’s stem. 

    eggplant seedling before and after roots broken up

    on the left, the eggplant seedling just out of the pot, and on the right, after the roots have been broken up
    Credit: Amanda Blum

    Demo

    Once the plant is out, you want to break up the roots by using your fingers like a comb on the bottom of the plant, so that roots are freed. That said, these plants do not enjoy their roots being disturbed: cucumbers, beans, pumpkins, luffa, beets, and most root vegetables. For these, I simply dig a hole, remove the plant from the plastic tray, carefully plop the plant in, and walk away. 

    Separate plants as necessary

    Carrots in a six pack


    Credit: Amanda Blum

    Most pots have more than one seed in each cell. In some cases, like tomatoes, someone usually culls the seedlings so only one is left to flourish. However, in some cases, like herbs and lettuce, nurseries leave the seeds alone and let multiple seeds grow. In other cases like onions and carrots, the cells are purposely overseeded to be filled with lots of seedlings. Strawberries usually come in a pot of five to 10 starts. 

    Separating onion seedlings

    If you take a cell of onion seedlings out, you can separate them by diving the block in half over and over again, until you have individual seedlings.
    Credit: Amanda Blum

    When there’s more than one seedling, you need to separate them. You shouldn’t try to plant them altogether. For lettuce or herbs, this is simple: Remove one cell, and with your fingers, gently pull the soil pod apart. Start by pulling the pod in half, and then keep dividing until all the seedlings are free. This works on larger plants like squash, and smaller plants like carrots where there can be 20 or more seedlings in a single cell. 

    Once the individual seedlings are free, they can each be planted as if they’re a whole plant. This is how you get a whole row of carrots or onions. This is also a great way to save money, since you usually get far more than six lettuce heads from a six-pack of lettuce. 


    What do you think so far?

    Know the right depth

    Eggplants planted deep


    Credit: Amanda Blum

    Plants need to go in the ground at the right depth, ensuring that the base of the plant is at soil level. In some cases, though, you can (and should) plant the stem deeper.

    Leeks and onions, for example, can be planted deeply. In particular, leeks can be planted as deeply as possible, with only an inch or two of seedling above the surface of the soil. This will help blanch the leek (keep it white). 

    Tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers can be planted deeply, as they’ll form roots along their entire stem. If your tomato is leggy (tall with little horizontal branching), this is a spectacular way to fix the problem. 

    When in doubt, follow the directions on the plant tag, or simply plant at a standard depth so the roots are covered, but the stem is exposed above the soil.

    Don’t mulch against your stems

    While mulch is an important part of insulating your vegetable plants and keeping moisture in the ground, it’s also a way to spread pathogens. You want to ensure plants have a few inches of clearance between them and the mulch. 

    Keep your labels or make new ones

    plant tags

    Keep those plant tags.
    Credit: Amanda Blum

    In the melee of planting, it’s common to lose your plant tags. After all, a tomato is a tomato. However, you’ll be sad at the end of the season when one tomato does spectacularly and another doesn’t, and you don’t know what variety each was. Label your plants! 



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