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Subject:  Two plants on opposing sides of a patch

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pg3

Lodi, California

This isn't really the right time of year for this question, but it popped into my mind and I wanted to give voice to it. It is pretty standard practice to grow two or even three plants in a single area, then cull down to the strongest or most desirable plant. Has anyone ever attempted doing this twice, once on each opposing side of a growing-area (4-6 plants on a single plot, for example), culled down to two plants, then allow these two plants to grow towards the center of the plot? I don't know if this is worth the effort, but I would think it would give the grower more choice, since they would be able to choose between two different plants mid-season. I'd like to your thoughts on this.

7/8/2019 6:03:07 PM

Little Ketchup

Grittyville, WA

Think big-- four or six... how about 500 plants in a 40 ft diameter circle and cull 1/2 of the plants every week. By the end of ten weeks the chosen 1 plant will remain. (And then later in the fall after all that rigorous selection it will go B.E.S. on you...) Thats my thoughts.

7/9/2019 2:26:08 AM

Little Ketchup

Grittyville, WA

Its a fine idea just depends what your goal is and how much work you can do.

7/9/2019 3:21:51 AM

cjb

Plymouth, MN

What you describe is how I've grown the last couple of years. Small plot, start two plants at the opposite end of the garden. Gives the chance to get a cross you want and a little bit more insurance for early screw ups.

In practice, one corner of my garden is near a black walnut and is fairly toxic. Tomatoes die. Pumpkin tolerates but does not thrive. So unless something dramatic happens to the one plant, I pretty much know who I'm growing at the beginning of the season.

7/9/2019 11:11:24 AM

pg3

Lodi, California

Yeah, that was my idea, to give the grower more tolerance for screw-ups. It's pretty hot where I live, so if I don't shade my mains they will wilt and die. Despite my efforts, I've already lost 2/4 of the main vines in my patch, and one of the surviving vines still got scorched. It would have been nice to have a backup plant in this particular scenario.

7/9/2019 2:28:55 PM

cojoe

Colorado

I know of growers that have room for one full sized plant that grow from opposite ends and pull one of them once they have one set on the main.

7/10/2019 5:33:16 PM

Total Posts: 6 Current Server Time: 11/29/2024 6:42:30 PM
 
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