How do you protect a vegetable garden from the heat in Oklahoma City?

by admin on January 26, 2012

vegetable garden
by The Forum News

Question by KGP: How do you protect a vegetable garden from the heat in Oklahoma City?

I follow the planting guidelines provided by the OSU Coop Ext to make sure I plant the right kind of vegetables at the correct time of year but the heat kills everything – regardless of watering. I lived in the Northeast and never had a problem with a vegetable garden, but OKC gardening has got me beat at this point. How do you protect the plants from the heat?

Best answer:

Answer by Schiller
It has nothing to do with the heat – I live in NW OK and have grown several different types of vegetables, without problems. It’s probably just a matter of under/over watering, and/or the type of vegetable you are trying to grow. I have a neighbor who successfully grows tomatoes, zuchinni, cucumbers, squash, and potatoes every summer. It isn’t uncommon for temperatures to reach 105F or higher every summer, so the termperature isn’t a factor is raising vegetables, just a matter of soil quality and how you manage your garden.

What do you think? Answer below!

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Judy January 26, 2012 at 9:42 pm

We live in the desert in Tucson, AZ. Always have a garden and when it gets hot it is really tough on all the plants. I mean dry hot like 110 degrees hot. We put some netting up to protect the tomatoes and also to keep the birds out and other pests like squirrels that will take a bite and ruin the fruits. The netting also gives some shade. Yes, if you recently moved to OK and gardening is somewhat different in all areas. We grow all the vegetables, flowers, tomatoes, cucumbers all on our mobile home lot in our backyard. We buy clean steer manure granulated every fall and dump several huge bags of it in the soil and let it sit in the soil for weeks or longer. By several I mean like about 20. You don’t want to plant much until it has soaked into the garden soil and you work the dirt and manure together. We’ve had a garden for 20 years and every yr it gets better and better. So if your area has not been gardened for a very long time it takes a couple years to build your soil into a good condition. Best of Luck to you and hope your garden grows good.

robert C January 26, 2012 at 10:36 pm

after watering very deeply put mulch around the plants, that will keep roots cool

Danny January 26, 2012 at 10:37 pm

Grow your plants in HydroHuts as it has a capacity to protect high intensity of sunlight

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