Organic Gardening - Eggplant
Grown Fresh in Your Own Garden
By John
Yazo
Eggplant with there beautiful purple flower and glossy fruit
that can be in a variety of colors are not only a vegetable,
but an excellent ornamental plant that can be included as a
part of your edible
landscape. They can be
grown in pots, window boxes, containers and the traditional way
that they are most known to be grown in, the garden.
Giving your eggplant a head start by starting to grow them as
transplants indoors is a good way to give them the time they
need to mature, they need up to 150 days to produce a mature
fruit, depending on the variety you choose to plant.
Either way you choose to plant eggplant, indoors or out, you
should soak the seeds for 12 hours before you start to plant.
This helps to encourage the seeds to germinate. The seeds need
to be planted and then covered with about 1/4 inch of soil or
media. When planting indoors place a growing heat mat under the
containers and keep the temperature between 80 and 90 degrees
Fahrenheit for about 8 to 10 days until they germinate and
sprout. Then transplant the seedlings into individual peat pots
once they have reached a height of 3 inches and leave them in a
warm sunny location, keeping them watered. Once the outside
temperatures have reached 50 degrees Fahrenheit at night you
can start hardening off the plants. Once your plants are
hardened off you can transplant them into larger containers if
needed. The temperature outdoors should be for both soil and
air 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Raised beds are the best method of
gardening if you want the soil to warm earlier in the
season.
Once the temperatures have gotten to where they need to be, you
can transplant the eggplant to there permanent location
outdoors. Eggplant need room to grow. Space them in the garden
2 1/2 to 3 feet apart and in rows 3 feet apart, water well and
give them a feeding of compost or manure tea. Mulch heavily
with an organic mulch once you have finished.
Eggplants are ready to harvest once there skins turn shinny or
glossy looking, this is at between 1/3 to 2/3 of there fully
matured size. A way of testing the skin to see if they are
ready is to press on the skin, if the skin doesn't spring back
then that means they are ready to be picked. Harvest by cutting
the fruit from the stem with a knife or pruning shears.
A environment friendly and healthy way
of gardening. Organic Gardening is away
of gardening in harmony with nature.
Growing a healthy and productive crop
in a way that is healthier for both you
and the environment.
John Yazo
http://www.organicheirloomgardening.com
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