It is very hard to grow anything edible in those conditions (well except that the mangoes and avocados are getting ripe). The irony of all ironies is that I can grow a few things using aquaponic techniques during this time. Yes, plants that would drown from all the rain if they were planted in soil will do OK if they are planted in water. They just must be plants that can take the heat.
Right now in my at home aquaponic gardens, I have purple hull peas, mint, lemon balm, rosemary, vinca, french marigold, oregano, miniature pepper, green onion, and lots of okra growing. The okra are the plants from the Floaters versus Sinkers seed wars I chronicled. As I suspected, there is really no difference between the floater and sinker seeds once the seedlings were planted.
However I am seeing a difference in how the okra is growing using different techniques. Unfortunately I dont have photos of the plants that were growing the best. These were the plants that were in NFT tubes. Even though the okra variety is Cajun Jewel, a dwarf variety, they still get several feet tall. Once I could no longer reach the plants in the tubes, I had to take them out and transplant them. This involved pruning both roots and tops. I re-established them in my newest media grow bed with my purple hull peas and due to the pruning they are now the smallest of the plants. Bonsai okra so to speak.



structure is similar to zeolite. These okra plants have already begin to bloom, fruit, and produce their first harvest. The okra have already crowded out the bottom row of NFT tubes that are mounted over the bed. I am planning on using that tube again when the okra get just a bit taller. As I did last year, I will use the okra as a shade for other plants on that bottom tube. This system is getting southern exposure like the DWC system, but it is doing so much better.
I was joking with a fellow gardener on-line this morning that I know so much useless information about okra. It is in the same family as the hibiscus and cotton. If you have ever seen an okra bloom, you know that they are very beautiful flowers. And if you time time to actually look at an okra bud and bloom then you can easily see how hibiscus and okra are related. The buds and flowers are shaped in a very similar manner.


By the way, I planted some of my okra seedlings in soil on the same day as I placed the others in the aquaponic gardens. Ive even given them a little fish emulsion to try to make things even. The growth of the plants in soil cant be compared to even the slowest growth of the plants in the DWC system. The soil based plants are not as richly colored and have not produced a bud or bloom yet. Their leaves are smaller and the plant stems thinner. But they do attract visitors. I wonder if this monarch is related to any of the pilars that started out on the DWC raft?

If you have never tried to grow okra, I encourage to give it a shot. It is very forgiving and once it gets going is a prolific producer. Even if you grow in soil, I still recommend growing the dwarf varieties because okra can get tall. And last but not least, be sure to save some of your seed. All of these plants are from last years seed.
OK, Ive shown you my okra......lets see yours!
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar