Cool
and Refreshing – Cucumbers
by Melinda Myers
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[April 12, 2021]
Add a cool refreshing twist to your meals,
beverages, appetizers, and snacks with cucumbers. These popular
vegetables are grown worldwide, adding anti-inflammatory vitamin K,
vitamins C, B-5 and more to your meals. Take it a step further by
using your own fresh-from-the-garden cucumbers.
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Grow cucumbers sprawled on the ground or in a
container on your patio, balcony, or deck. Save space and train them
up a decorative support. They make great vertical accents in
containers as well as edible and ornamental gardens. Going vertical
not only saves space, it improves productivity by reducing disease
problems while also making harvesting easier.
You will find a wide variety of cucumbers available from seed
company catalogs and on the seed racks of your favorite garden
center. Check with your local Extension service website for their
recommendations for your location.
Select the best cucumber for your garden space, meals, and snacks.
Bush types like Salad bush produce eight-inch slicing cucumbers on a
small plant. Spacemaster is a compact plant, spreading 24 inches and
suitable for containers and hanging baskets. All-America Selections
winner Saladmore Bush is another semi-bush plant that starts
producing cucumbers in 55 days from planting.
Green Light is a 2020 All-America Selections winner that produces an
abundance of great tasting mini cucumbers. Grow to the other extreme
with burpless-type cucumbers that can be harvested when much larger.
They have been bred to contain little or no cucurbitacin that causes
bitterness and the tendency to burp when consumed.
Wait for the soil to warm and danger of frost to pass for planting
seeds one half to one inch deep in properly prepared soil. Plant
several cucumber seeds in a large container or in rows or hills in
the garden. Space seeds 12 inches apart in rows 36 inches apart. Or
plant several seeds in hills (small mounds of soil) spaced 36 inches
apart.
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Water thoroughly and often enough to keep the soil
slightly moist. Apply a one- to two-inch layer of shredded leaves,
evergreen needles, or other organic matter over the soil surface to
conserve moisture, suppress weeds and reduce the risk of soil borne
diseases.
Watch for the first flush of flowers in 50 to 70 days
after planting. The first set of flowers are all male flowers, so no
fruit can form. Soon male and female flowers will appear for bees to
pollinate and fruit to develop.
Harvest your cucumbers based on how you plan to use them. Pick when
one and a half to two and a half inches long for making sweet
pickles and three to four inches for dills. Harvest slicing
cucumbers when the fruit is firm, green, crisp and six to eight
inches long. Burpless-type cucumbers will maintain their flavor at
even larger sizes. Check the seed packet for harvesting directions.
With proper selection, planting and care you will be rewarded with
an abundant harvest. So be prepared to enjoy, preserve, and share
your homegrown fresh cucumbers.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” DVD series and the nationally-syndicated Melinda’s Garden
Moment TV & radio program. Myers is also a columnist and
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine. Her website is
www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo credit: MelindaMyers.com]
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