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Old January 29, 2012   #1
Dukerdawg
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Default Ideas for GH in the summer

I thought of putting this in the growing under cover area but it really isn't a typical GH question. My GH is 18x6 and I use it in the spring to slowly harden peppers and tomatoes mostly and then the 'maters get put out in the garden and I plant the peppers in big 15-20 gallon pots in the greenhouse...they love the hot summer sun. Last year was just a bonanza for the peppers (hot mostly) that I was thinking of growing something else in there this year.

What would also tolerate if not like the extra heat? I would have to plant bush varieties of something. Thinking beans and cukes and maybe a couple of dwarf tomatoes....but I have plenty of room in the garden for my 'maters and other years were not that lucrative with Patio type tomatoes in there.

Throw me some ideas please!

Duane
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Old January 29, 2012   #2
janezee
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I'm putting eggplant in mine this year. Can't get them otherwise here.
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Old January 29, 2012   #3
saltmarsh
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Hi, Duane

Don't know what your setup is, but I've had problems with too much heat in the summer since I put mine up 7 years ago.

It's 24' W x 48' L x 13' H /w 8' sidewalls.

When I recovered it in 2011 I added 3 windows on the north and south sides. With 60% aluminet on the roof, the temp stays about 3 degrees cooler than the ambient temp outside.

If you can add a small window in your side walls and shade part of the roof, you should see similar results. Claud
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Old January 29, 2012   #4
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A cacti collection.
Dwarf okra.


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Old January 29, 2012   #5
kath
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Dehydrating fruits and vegetables?
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Old January 29, 2012   #6
barefootgardener
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How about some small melons that could climb up a trellis, or armenian cukes..I grew those in my GH last 2 seasons and they did really well.

Ginny
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Old January 29, 2012   #7
rxkeith
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hey duane

have you been hibernating or what

eggplant as already mentioned, and you can do melons vertically and for support use some old panty hose or nylon stockings that will expand as the melon grows. might be too hot for beans in there, but i would try pole beans along the fence somewhere where the dogs won't rip them down or pee on, maybe along the back of your garden or on the fence outside of the gate along your driveway. if you decide to do pole beans i have some good ones i can send you. just let me know.


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Old January 31, 2012   #8
barkeater
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Duane,

18'x6' GH? I'm really jealous. I would grow what I really love but can't get a harvest from outside. #1 for me would be eggplant. #2 would be sweet potatoes. After that, maybe some okra or a couple habanero types in pots.
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Old January 31, 2012   #9
PaulF
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Duane:
Good to see you posting again. But okra? Northern boys don't do that stuff.

Post often and keep us informed.
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Old January 31, 2012   #10
FarmerShawn
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barkeater - I'm in the Connecticut River Valley about 30 miles from the Canadian border, zones such as you describe, and I've had success with both eggplant and sweet potatoes. I admit I haven't tried very hard with eggplant, because my wife can't stand it, so we don't eat it, but I grew some for market last year, my first year selling. And I've been growing sweet potatoes for about 5 years now, each year growing more and more. This year I've ordered a bunch from Sandhill Preservation, choosing early ones to see how they grow. I was charmed and taken in by his dismissive attitude toward the varieties I have grown in the past simply because that's what the seed companies offer. I can't wait to see the difference.
Anyway, I just start the eggplants early and they go into the ground the same time as the rest of the transplants - after Memorial Day. The sweet potatoes go into hilled rows whenever they arrive - last year it was mid-to-late June. I worried they were too late, but they grew and produced just fine.
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Old February 1, 2012   #11
barkeater
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Shawn,

The CRV is likely a great area for growing compared to the middle of the NEK at 1400 feet elevation. My only advantage is probably a better chance of avoiding late or early frosts being up high. Believe me, I've done everything to grow sweet potatoes and eggplants here. For 2 years running I tried 3 different early varieties and got great vines and tiny sweets using plastic, row covers, etc. In 5 years growing Rosa Bianca eggplant I got 3 fruit one year. I'm sure Orient Express or some ofthe other skinny ones would crop, but I just like the big ones for eggplant parm.
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