Your Cucumbers Will LOVE You For This: 5 Things To Do NOW!

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  • Опубликовано: 30 май 2024
  • In this video, I share 5 things to do immediately after planting cucumbers that your cucumbers will love you for! Be sure to do these things shortly after planting cucumber plants out in your garden to set your cucumbers up for amazing success this season.
    Cucumbers can be finicky and temperamental, and if you don't set your cucumber plants up for success immediately, they may struggle their entire lives. Cucumbers grow quickly and have short lifespans, so early mistakes can lead to failure. Getting the initial conditions right for each cucumber plant is critically important for best performance. These 5 cucumber tips will help set you on the right path for a great cucumber harvest.
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    0:00 5 Tips For Growing Cucumber Plants After Planting
    0:38 Tip #1: When To Transplant Cucumbers
    2:34 Tip #2: Mulching Cucumbers
    4:30 Tip #3: Growing Cucumbers Vertically
    6:10 Tip #4: Growing Parthenocarpic Cucumbers
    12:19 Tip #5: Succession Planting Cucumbers
    14:54 Bonus Cucumber Tip
    16:43 Adventures With Dale
    If you have questions about how to grow cucumbers in your garden, have questions about growing fruit trees or want to know about the things I grow in my raised bed vegetable garden and edible landscaping food forest, are looking for more gardening tips and tricks and "garden hacks" like this, have questions about vegetable gardening and organic gardening in general, or want to share some DIY and "how to" garden tips and gardening hacks of your own, please ask in the Comments below!
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    #gardening #gardeningtips #garden #cucumber #cucumbers

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @colorfulbutmuted8975
    @colorfulbutmuted8975 Год назад +51

    I plant my cucumber at the end of my sunflower rows. I then help guide my cucumber vine to grab a hold of the sunflower stalks. My vines are a sight to see, as they spread down the sunflower rows about two to four feet off the ground in a sprawling manner as though they were crawling on the ground. They are very easy to "prune”, as I just guide offshoot vines to grab on to a new sunflower stalk, or at a higher/lower point on a stalk from the original main vine. My sunflowers grow 6-9' tall, so there is no competition between the cucumber vine and sunflower leaves either.

    • @larezzatruman8097
      @larezzatruman8097 Месяц назад +1

      Luv this idea

    • @SuperCptnjack
      @SuperCptnjack 27 дней назад +7

      Could you possibly link to a picture or video of this? I would be super curious to see how this looks

  • @godfatherstabba
    @godfatherstabba 2 года назад +328

    I find male flowers on cucumbers. Pick them off and tear away the pedals. Take the rest of the male flower (which reminds me of a male appendage) and twirl it in the base of the female flower. I have a very high success rate using this method. I do a LOT of self pollination due to the lack of bees. Also use this method on all squash plants also.

    • @paulpardee650
      @paulpardee650 2 года назад +4

      Ok ok

    • @JS-jh4cy
      @JS-jh4cy Год назад +22

      Have you tried to get more bees by planting more of what they want

    • @outdoorgal9602
      @outdoorgal9602 Год назад +8

      I do the same for zucchini.

    • @godfatherstabba
      @godfatherstabba Год назад +12

      @@JS-jh4cy yes. We have tons of blanket flowers and zinnia. Very few bees have come around. We are contemplating our own hive. Have you had experience with a hive?

    • @djpaz75
      @djpaz75 Год назад

      @@godfatherstabba my advice is don't have a hive. Recent research has shown honey Bees who are only indigenous to Europe are very aggressive to our native Bees and eagerly suppress them. What region are you in and have you watched any of the Xerces Society RUclips? They have dozens of hours of stuff specific to saving native pollinators specifically in different regions Of America. You may already have tiny Bees and just not noticed them. Also let a stand of weeds grow and catalog and monitor them to pull invasive species. Bees will visit you certainly if you don't have lots of Neonics in the area

  • @tammybrown4410
    @tammybrown4410 Месяц назад +19

    I enjoyed this video. This needs to be taught in schools. Some sort of program to give kids seeds and such.

  • @margebickley84
    @margebickley84 2 года назад +162

    I love watching you guys. I am soon to be 82 and I do a lot of canning but my strength is not what it use to be. I have been looking at the harvest Right Freeze dryer for awhile. My husband passed away last May so finances have gone down tremendously but by next year I hopefully will have money enough to buy one. I have learned a lot from you folks.
    Sure would Like to win the freezer this year as garden is coming in already.
    God Bless
    Marge Bickley

    • @knownforthelove
      @knownforthelove Год назад +14

      You go, Sister Gardener & Cook😎🌺!

    • @conniecasale3593
      @conniecasale3593 Год назад +14

      God bless you darling

    • @omidee2926
      @omidee2926 Год назад +19

      I hope you win that freezer too Marge!🌷

    • @donnalawrence8593
      @donnalawrence8593 Год назад +15

      My condolences on the passing of your husband. I hope someone can help you out.

    • @shelleywelch55
      @shelleywelch55 Год назад +4

      I heard one of the other gardeners say that the Har est Right is not worth the money. I can't remember who said it...maybe do some research on it if you haven't already...Good luck!!

  • @Coachwill101
    @Coachwill101 10 месяцев назад +21

    I learned more in this short video than a lifetime experimenting with gardening. Your style and presentation made it w day to watch. Great job!

  • @RA-rf4nz
    @RA-rf4nz Год назад +22

    Cuernavaca, Mexico is where you want to plant yourself, the City of Eternal Spring. Aztec emperors made their homes there and the Spanish conquistador, Hernan Cortes made it his residence there in 1535 after conquering the Aztec Empire. I stayed there for about a month in summer of 1992 and it was wonderful.

  • @tonyajackson8827
    @tonyajackson8827 6 часов назад

    Thank you for the helpful tips, as usual! :) And Dale at the end getting a pup cup is just a BONUS! 💙Dale!💙

  • @TheMillennialGardener
    @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +191

    If you found this video helpful, please “Like” and share to help increase its reach! Thanks for watching 😊TIMESTAMPS for convenience:
    0:00 5 Tips For Growing Cucumber Plants After Planting
    0:38 Tip #1: When To Transplant Cucumbers
    2:34 Tip #2: Mulching Cucumbers
    4:30 Tip #3: Growing Cucumbers Vertically
    6:10 Tip #4: Growing Parthenocarpic Cucumbers
    12:19 Tip #5: Succession Planting Cucumbers
    14:54 Bonus Cucumber Tip
    16:43 Adventures With Dale

    • @donnalawrence8593
      @donnalawrence8593 2 года назад +6

      Too bad there is no Love button! I am glad I found you. You are a nice guy too. Have a great weekend.

    • @cristiewentz8586
      @cristiewentz8586 Год назад +8

      Lots of great information! One hint i use: when they reach the top of my trellis (about 4")...i pinch the growing tip out. The cuke puts out side shoots and the harvest is doubled or tripled.

    • @wolveswithin1883
      @wolveswithin1883 Год назад +2

      I'm proud I've done four of the five. I planted straight eights because it is what I had on hand. Wish me luck. I have never succeeded with cucumbers. I'm doing everything I've learned over the winter. 🤞

    • @sharonjosefik766
      @sharonjosefik766 Год назад +1

      I do the same with squash..tomatoes..peppers and peas

    • @donaldduck830
      @donaldduck830 Год назад +1

      Nope: Point 1: Pepper are very sensitive to low temperatures. But the cucmbers need to acclimatize to the sunlight, the plants can be destroyed by sunburn. So I plant them out before tomatoes and peppers.
      Point 3: Cucumbers are hardy and sprout additional roots, increasing the harvest per plant.
      4: Not in my garden. Got a lot of bumblebees and flowers for them, so veggie plants get optimal pollination for optimal fruits.
      Next: Where do you get new cucumber plants from next year if you have fruits without seeds?
      5 What? Well they get mildew late in autumn, but I take off the leaves and keep harvesting.
      THuMBS DOWN.

  • @nicholem908
    @nicholem908 Год назад +8

    Guatemala is nicknamed the Land of Eternal Spring.. and it's cheap to live there. It's my second home!

  • @duanelee6208
    @duanelee6208 Год назад +3

    I have noticed very few Utuber Garden shows rarely mention soil temperatures. After 50 years of gardening I have learned to plant once the soil temp of a minimum of 48-50 F is perfect for planting cucumbers, tomatoes and vegetables with the exception of leafy greens.

  • @kevinmuma1725
    @kevinmuma1725 Год назад +15

    China Jade is good, but Jibiai Sshimoshirazu beats it all day long. No spines, sweeter and even fewer seeds. From the same supplier Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, you show the packages at 12:49. Instead of strings for trellising, use cattle panels. Strings are subject to weather, wind specifically, cattle panels are stable.

  • @user-gh8sl7iu3y
    @user-gh8sl7iu3y 3 дня назад +1

    Wow, your cukes look so healthy. This is my second year growing cukes and they are already being eaten where the leaves look like lace. I grow vertically and last year despite looking awful they eventually produced a great harvest but I almost ripped them out on a daily basis due to the appearance. The cukes and muskmelon are testing my confidence as a new gardener.

  • @dortemadsen2166
    @dortemadsen2166 Год назад +90

    Best part about the 5th tip is that IT IS NOT TOO LATE for me to sew some cucumbers and zucchinis this year. 😁
    My tiny garden has been lying fallow for years but I half heartedly planted a couple of tomato plants this year and the little golden sun tomatoes reminded me of how great it is to pick fresh produce! Now I also understand why I was never able to keep those darn cucumbers alive for long and everything else in the garden tended to go downhill after they started to die (actually one of the reasons I gave up on the whole thing years back).
    Thank you, that definitely earned you a subscriber!

    • @mapofthesoultagme7143
      @mapofthesoultagme7143 Год назад +1

      It is too late where I live if I grow them outside

    • @thomas2782
      @thomas2782 10 месяцев назад +2

      be sure to pick the cukes while they are young. Once you let one get too old, the plant figures it's done it's job and stops producing.

    • @iamshredder3587
      @iamshredder3587 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@thomas2782how young? (Or how big)
      How do you know when its the right time? Size, colour, feel , something else?
      Also u no is it true like tomatoes you shouldn't plant them in the same spot twice in a row? (Or not the same verity least) ot somewhere that's had other plants of same family as tomatoes in there? To help avoid disease?
      Thx

    • @thomas2782
      @thomas2782 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@iamshredder3587 you can't let them start to turn yellow, the approximate size expected (depends on the variety) would be the time to pick them

    • @maryfarnham9806
      @maryfarnham9806 Месяц назад

      0:00 0:00 @@thomas2782

  • @huertamipequenoeden9425
    @huertamipequenoeden9425 Год назад +3

    Bro I know that place u asked...it's name is Cholula Puebla Mexico...I have tomatoes all year around...trust me this is like heaven bro. Blessings

  • @MicrowavedTofu
    @MicrowavedTofu Год назад +40

    I check my plants daily for new blooms. I stick my finger in the center of each of them. It really helps to pollinate them ☺️

    • @robw748
      @robw748 11 месяцев назад +4

      Using a pencil type paint brush works even better. Try and see whatcha thing about it ;)

    • @melaniearnold1270
      @melaniearnold1270 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@robw7484, 😅😅😅😊😊

  • @wesleymargeson1134
    @wesleymargeson1134 2 года назад +57

    This is one of the most helpful garden videos I have ever seen. Thank you!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +8

      You’re welcome! I’m glad you enjoyed the presentation. I try to make them easy to follow.

    • @katysbigdad
      @katysbigdad Год назад +4

      What is the variety of multi headed sunflower that is in the background of your brilliant video ?

    • @MaggsBartlett
      @MaggsBartlett 11 месяцев назад

      L

  • @tomyanno972
    @tomyanno972 Год назад +65

    YOU ARE AWESOME!!! I learned more from you in 16 minutes than I’ve learned from all others combined! Thank you so much. I’m in North Myrtle Beach and have scant bees and abundant fungus! Doing everything possible to pollinate my tomatoes, zucchini and now cucumbers, surrounding my garden with flowers, etc. Thanks again…you are so helpful!!!

    • @marshabeatty6589
      @marshabeatty6589 Год назад +2

      Hey, I’m in NMB too! I’ve had an awful time of it with pests this year

    • @bobrenaldo467
      @bobrenaldo467 Год назад +2

      i agree... learned more from hiim than others.

    • @maryfuentes5110
      @maryfuentes5110 Год назад

      Yes. Indeed!❤

    • @nadialawson8891
      @nadialawson8891 11 месяцев назад +2

      Look up Electroculture, its been incredible for my tomatoes, strawberries and basically everything in my garden is giving me like 4X what I normally get…and the best part is I have almost no pests or fungus. You just wrap a wood dowel with pure copper wire and create a little coil at the top, it works on the same premise as Nikola Teslas research on energy from the earth, i think you will be very happy with the results, God bless! Happy gardening

  • @orangemoonglows2692
    @orangemoonglows2692 2 года назад +19

    i'm in a dry desert/95f+ ever day (southern california), it's best for me to start melons, squash, etc by direct seed. they need to grow accustomed to that heat without too much coddling. transplanting can be difficulty because of that intense heat unless maybe if you've started and have grown the seedlings outside in that heat. mine are all fine. nothing's bothering them.

  • @patriciafaithfull6360
    @patriciafaithfull6360 День назад

    i learned SOOOOO MUCH!! AND I've been gardening for years.

  • @julesgoh
    @julesgoh 2 года назад +27

    Oh wow!! I only just subscribed to your channel this month. I was thinking do I need another gardening channel BUT when I heard your tip #5, I was totally sold. The details you go into is just amazingly helpful. It answers almost all my questions about cucumber growing. Sooo good to know I should expect them to grow fast and die fast. They keep dying so quickly on me. Now I know why. Thank you! I will definitely be watching more of your new and old videos.

  • @tuffguytattoo1
    @tuffguytattoo1 Месяц назад +3

    I just bought some cucumber plants and seeds today. The algorithm brought up your video . Exactly what I needed to know

  • @firetop9532
    @firetop9532 Год назад +20

    Thank you for this vid it's been a massive help to me,I'm a self taught self employed gardener in my local area,I'm dyslexic so struggle reading most times,this break down helped me loads,I do research on plants and mediums daily it takes me about 20× longer then most to learn the simplest things when reading this vid got straight to the point awsome work growmie thank you 👍

  • @eliseamiot5412
    @eliseamiot5412 Год назад +7

    Hands down THE best cucumber tutorial out there! Thank you.

  • @user-xu2jf4ob8d
    @user-xu2jf4ob8d 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you so much. I am a cucumber farmer and we have a lack of bees in north Dakota right now. I had to pollinate my own plants last year. Currently subscribed

  • @AlbShpirt
    @AlbShpirt Год назад +4

    Better than a biology class

  • @anne-mariekane5916
    @anne-mariekane5916 Год назад +61

    This is my first true gardening season in SE NC and I'm relieved I found your channel before starting my garden this year. You've been a great resource for what to do or not do but even if I wasn't living in NC, you do a great job explaining things for anyone. Thank you!

  • @Lemmy_SoCal_Gardener
    @Lemmy_SoCal_Gardener 2 года назад +31

    All great information! Never knew about self pollinating (non pollinating) cucumber plants. Hoping the bees visit my garden this year as much as they did last year. thanks for another informative video! 💚🌱🥒💯

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +5

      Ah remember, standard monoecious cucumbers are self-pollinating, but the male flowers are separate from the female flowers, so pollination must be done manually by pollinators. Parthenocarpic cucumbers can set fruit without pollination, so your yields increase significantly. I recommend trying these varieties I featured next year, especially Beit Alpha. It is my favorite.

    • @NatureScapesStudio
      @NatureScapesStudio 2 года назад +5

      Plant fennel and other flowers around you vegs….they invite the bees in.

  • @Blackwaterswamp
    @Blackwaterswamp Год назад +104

    I just started gardening this year /month and I found your channel to be so clear and helpful on every aspect of gardening. Building, planning, watering, diseases, pests, varieties. Thank you 🌞❤️

    • @wendytrotter4148
      @wendytrotter4148 Год назад +1

      Thank you for this information, I never knew this about cucumbers.

    • @rubyewiggins4926
      @rubyewiggins4926 Год назад +1

      Watch a guy called David the good and mi Gardner

    • @JimKat5646
      @JimKat5646 Год назад

      Don’t buy seedless products, communist countries would love you to do that so on your own you can’t use the seeds to grow food , you’ll years from now be be very dependent on whomever can find seeds for you. You’ll be dependent on grocery stores and farms which China is buying up

    • @ivahihopeful
      @ivahihopeful Год назад

      He’s great!

  • @joebacarella2829
    @joebacarella2829 Год назад +8

    Great video, WE had so many cucumbers we could not eat them all, and in two months it was over, they yellowed and died, I thought I did something wrong. I will replant some in a month, and remove the old plants, I did not know they mature so quickly, great tip, thanks for the info, I am in Michigan with high heat and humidity, so yeah, they lived hard and died fast, I was scratching my head.

  • @anthonyscinocca4380
    @anthonyscinocca4380 Год назад +10

    We are north of Winnipeg, Manitoba. So most plants like tomatoes are under grow lights because our climate is cold. Apple crops are wonderful because our winters are sometimes 30 degrees or more below. But July and August are very hot months, like often over 80 degrees. But too short for more than one crop. We just finished planting tomatoes today, June 11. Very challenging climate. This year it’s flooding and mosquitoes.

  • @deerdiarycountrylife
    @deerdiarycountrylife 26 дней назад

    Love the info about succession planning!

  • @Marcosworld77
    @Marcosworld77 Год назад +18

    Alfalfa Hay or pellets is a good option because it will feed your plants and keep them moist. Pellets and hay as it breaks down will produce heat in your soil further helping cucumbers to stay at a warmer soil temp in the early part of summer. It should have a Npk ratio of 3-2-2 on average according to what ive read.

    • @MicrowavedTofu
      @MicrowavedTofu Год назад +4

      Genius I'm going to try this! Already have hay on hand for my rabbit (and yes I use the poo too)😅

    • @DebRoo11
      @DebRoo11 Год назад

      ​@@MicrowavedTofu please dont use hay. Its full of seeds. Youll have so many weeds you'll regret it. Use bagged bedding STRAW. No weeds. Ibe made the mistake of hay 😔 ive used bedding straw for the last 5 years and no weeds, clean and I wont use anything else now

    • @wendya1250
      @wendya1250 Год назад +1

      @@DebRoo11 Thanks for that. I also used hay in the past and had so much grass come up it was terrible. Good to know about the straw. I'm actually trying a coconut mulch that I purchased from Costco. Hope it works ok.

    • @DebRoo11
      @DebRoo11 Год назад +1

      @@wendya1250 ooh ive heard thats great too. Good luck this year 🌱

  • @idaho38
    @idaho38 Год назад +4

    last year I grew 2 tomato plants and I did put them next to the fence, then I used those metal tomato cages, and once they grew taller I went to the second hand store and bought knitting thread ( a bag had 3 rolls for $3 dollars) and used that to hold the branches and it works fine.
    on craigslist you can find those tomato cages for free on winter...my neighbor gave me 4 of them for free, I should of grabbed the rest of them that she put next to the trash...oh well.
    anyway, I don't like cucumbers much but my husband does.

  • @ritasenergyherbs3650
    @ritasenergyherbs3650 Год назад +11

    I added a 40% Aluminet shade cloth over my raised beds this year to protect from the UV rays - my cukes are loving it! I am growing vertically this year using a cow panel. Thank you for the variety tip!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Год назад +3

      I need to invest in more shade cloth. My cucumbers are starting to feel the heat and need some cover.

    • @sharondensmore5052
      @sharondensmore5052 Месяц назад

      What is a cow panel please?

  • @jzlt1323
    @jzlt1323 Месяц назад +1

    So helpful!

  • @goldiegreen1976
    @goldiegreen1976 4 дня назад

    Thank you! You explained things I didn’t even know that I needed to know but whoa I do!! ❤ appreciate your channel

  • @trex3003
    @trex3003 Год назад +5

    Yes, very helpful. I'm trying to grow cucumbers for the first time. Your tips are great.

  • @cristiewentz8586
    @cristiewentz8586 Год назад +7

    I've used parthenocarpic varieties in the past. They are superb during the hot part of summer when other varieties slow down or drop flowers due to heat. I discovered the Asian non bitter types about 4 years ago. They handle the heat well, are never bitter..and I can save seed, which I couldn't with the parthenocarpic varieties. Shintokiwa is my main crop.

  • @superiorconcretetownsville6333
    @superiorconcretetownsville6333 7 дней назад

    Your channel is a ray of sunshine on the internet.

  • @grandeernesto4756
    @grandeernesto4756 Год назад +1

    I just became evenly moist after watching this! Thanks for the great video

  • @llswink
    @llswink Год назад +10

    I've been growing Beit Alpha for 3 seasons now and they are my favorite for fresh eating and for pickling. I never realized that succession planting would help me have more fruits. This year I planted at least 20 plants and now realize that I planted way too early and too many. The weather has now gotten into 80s to 90s and the plants are fizzling out. I got the same harvest from all these plants as I did from 5 the last few years. Will be planting some new seeds for a last crop for the summer and will be spacing them out this time! Thank you!

  • @joylane5560
    @joylane5560 Год назад +3

    Thank you! I have been growing cucumbers for years, but still learned new things from you!

  • @BluebonnetU
    @BluebonnetU 9 месяцев назад +1

    I made some mistakes with my cucumber plant and learned some tips from you. Thank you so much!!

  • @juliehamel4518
    @juliehamel4518 Год назад +1

    Awww he's so sweet , we love Dale 💗💗💗

  • @caroldragon7545
    @caroldragon7545 Год назад +9

    You might be interested in a couple of other parthenocarpic plants. Silver slicer is a white cucumber, and so it is easy to see among all the foliage. I am going to try growing it under cover to avoid cucumber beetles this year. Partenon is a wonderful zucchini. I have to grow zucchini under cover until late summer because of squash vine borers. You can harvest Partenon fruit even at almost triple the usual size and it is still tender and sweet with no fiber. A word of caution, my Partenons grew to giant size three feet high withleaves over 18 inches wide. The covering was useless at that size, but fortunately it was later in summer and the borers weren't active.

  • @eileenbartnick7202
    @eileenbartnick7202 2 года назад +13

    Hello! Didn't know there was this type of self pollinating cucumbers. Great to hear about. Could you let us know what seed companies you like to use and that carry these seeds please. I didn't see anything in the links you posted. Thanks so much!! Happy gardening!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +10

      All monoecious cucumbers are self-pollinating. The problem is they have separate male and female flowers, so pollination is unreliable. Parthenocarpic varieties don’t require pollination at all: that’s why they’re more reliable. These varieties came from Baker Creek. They have several parthenocarpic varieties.

  • @anthonykenny2631
    @anthonykenny2631 Год назад

    Thank you for all your help!

  • @reneebrown2968
    @reneebrown2968 Год назад

    That is why I have 2 bee hives. I love to garden and love watching my girls working my garden and trees.

  • @51rwyatt
    @51rwyatt 2 года назад +24

    Learning that planting too early is bad, one of the harder things for excited gardeners like me. I saw sluggish growth from tomato/cukes from planting on the last av. frost date. This year waited a couple/three weeks. Here's hoping!

    • @cathyeller5722
      @cathyeller5722 2 года назад +2

      I did that this year, they turned yellow and stayed small. I just pulled them up and replanted.

    • @BestGranny10
      @BestGranny10 2 года назад

      Good luck!

    • @woodsy3495
      @woodsy3495 2 года назад

      Ya that was a big lesson learned for me this year. Lost half my peppers, all my cucumbers, and even a couple zukes. Tomatoes were extremely sluggish. Big time bummer.

    • @17penobscot
      @17penobscot 2 года назад +1

      Some crop like cool weather and don’t like the heat, peas, cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower early. Tomato’s, peppers, cucumbers, melons once it’s hotter.

    • @valeriesanchez3074
      @valeriesanchez3074 Год назад +1

      Could always start indoors.
      Like hardening off to the sun only takes about 4 days.
      Just saying

  • @debbievannortwick7107
    @debbievannortwick7107 Год назад +8

    Hi. Your videos are incredibly helpful. We purchased elevated raised beds due to some mobility limitations. Can you consider doing a video on what needs to be done differently in this type of structure? Thanks.

  • @sunflowerz54
    @sunflowerz54 Год назад +1

    I love this it’s snowing in Texas ;)😊

  • @urabundant
    @urabundant 2 года назад

    Yay! I did this right!!!

  • @DwightHayles
    @DwightHayles Год назад +9

    Agree totally with you on starting cucs and zucs indoors and transplanting. I live in southern VA - and use the same technique with great success.

  • @ixoraroxi
    @ixoraroxi Год назад +8

    For a very first time I sawed a parthenocarpic cucumbers this year, zone 7b. So far I'm very pleased with the results! I do pinch and remove the male flowers, because in a close proximity I planted some French cornishons. If they cros pollinate the cornishons will turn out bitter.
    P.S. I do hand- pollinate the zucchini, to increase yield. After pinching the male flowers and when I'm done with the job I do fry them. They are very delicious cooked (fried) with coating of eggs and flour.

    • @outdoorgal9602
      @outdoorgal9602 Год назад +1

      My grandmother fried the blooms like that when I was a kid!

  • @Gaddmans.Garden
    @Gaddmans.Garden 2 года назад +2

    Awesome, vid. All the questions on one , quick informational, instructional detail. Love this channel. Thanks!💪🏻

  • @lindag9975
    @lindag9975 Год назад

    Thanks! Volumes of great information!
    Love the scenes with Dale.

  • @linedezainde
    @linedezainde Год назад +8

    This is, by far, the most informative video about growing cucumbers I have ever watched! Thank you for sharing all this information!

  • @renato113
    @renato113 2 года назад +3

    This guy is a genius and gardening. Great job my friend keep it up !

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад

      Thank you! I just love trying new things and finding out what works best. Gardening is about diversity and variety and evaluating what does best for your unique location.

  • @katieamero6714
    @katieamero6714 Год назад +2

    You have explained more to me in detail than any other videos I love thank you!!!

  • @charitymiles1026
    @charitymiles1026 11 месяцев назад

    Hi from Shelby, NC! I love finding gardening tips from local growers! 😊

  • @AnitaSouthall
    @AnitaSouthall Год назад +6

    You definitely explained why my pumpkin fruits fell off. I changed to transplantation of seeds after germination into large tubs. it is a new phase of food production for me after just mostly fruit trees for over 25 years.
    Citrus trees I'm great at but the rest I'd always a learning curve.
    I'm having lots of smiles when something is working out.
    Cheers from the Harris home in Geraldton Western Australia 🇦🇺

  • @TheTrock121
    @TheTrock121 2 года назад +11

    I usually direct seed, but this year I started my Cucumbers a few weeks ago in the cruciferous bed between the Cabbage and Collard Greens. The row cover protected them and they were ready to transplant yesterday just as the Cabbage was starting to squeeze them. They are planted along a fence, but I still might try the string trellis system.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +3

      I really love the string trellis. It's a game-changer. Once you use it, it's tough to go back.

  • @cyndiburns7932
    @cyndiburns7932 Год назад

    Awesome helpful tip! Thanks so much for your help for fixing some of our yearly problems.

  • @lauracreen4081
    @lauracreen4081 17 дней назад

    I love that I ran across your channel...I live in Wilmington too!!

  • @bigjohnfus4232
    @bigjohnfus4232 Год назад +4

    Dude, Outstanding vid. I just subscribed. Your ability to explain your methods in a clear, concise, and UNDERSTANDABLE manner is amazing. When I'm done with this comment, I'm going out to string up my cucumbers. Thanks so much!

    • @monierzahiri9749
      @monierzahiri9749 Год назад

      I like your videos, are very helpful. I'm on so CA. Last year my cucumber plant died, there wasn't any pollination I guess. Hope this year I get done fruits. We have lots of gophers & squrels

  • @takishasage-freebeautyzone
    @takishasage-freebeautyzone Год назад +17

    Great video! I'm in NC also, and I've been enjoying the China Jade and Beit Alpha varieties this year as well. Thanks for the reminder to get my second wave seeds started. I'll add it to my to-do list. I anticipate really needing them with these 100+ deg days we're about to have over the next 2 weeks. 🥵 New subscriber here 🙋🏽‍♀️

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Год назад +1

      We are getting crushed today, and it's going to be even worse tomorrow. We "only" hit 94, but the dew point is absolutely ridiculous. It i sso oppressive outside that it is difficult to breathe. Everything is going to be coated in disease after this 10 day forecast. I'll be spraying copper tonight, unfortunately.

    • @maryjojouwstra3860
      @maryjojouwstra3860 Год назад +1

      Where do you find that variety of seeds?

    • @faydenereed4056
      @faydenereed4056 Год назад +2

      If you let one cucumber on a vine get too big and get yellow on a little of it the vine thinks it did it’s job so it dies. If you pick them pretty small and leave none on too long it will continue giving fruit all summer!

  • @debk5325
    @debk5325 Год назад

    TY TY TY! Great info. You explained things beautifully.

  • @nancygonzalez6788
    @nancygonzalez6788 Месяц назад

    Thank you

  • @cleonawallace376
    @cleonawallace376 Год назад +6

    Thanks for this... this is my second year growing. Last year the wild boar destroyed everything, but also we realised that it was just way too hot, so this year we've moved the veg garden so that it's shaded from afternoon sun. We've had a heat wave here since May and everything seems to take so much longer than I anticipate, so we've been much later at getting things planted than I had intended. I had tons of lovely zucchini and squash that have all frazzled away sitting in pots, and I was feeling a bit glum, but hearing you talk about succession planting them, I feel inspired that maybe it's not too late to start more! That's one of the challenges of watching youtube videos as a beginner gardener... everyone has such different ecological contexts, between heat, rain, soil types, so I'm learning that I have to work out what works here... we have a long season as winter doesn't really get cold until the end of December, and our summer is super hot, so I am thinking autumn growing might be a good idea here.

    • @sunnyseacat9232
      @sunnyseacat9232 Год назад +2

      Wouldn't pots add heat to vegetables? Soil in ground would keep them cooler. Also, big white bed sheets (thrift stores) hung from branches, tied to fences/posts, etc. provide shade...

    • @pattiannepascual
      @pattiannepascual Год назад

      what state? wild boar. I hope we don't have those here in NJ.

    • @MissBetsyLu
      @MissBetsyLu Год назад +1

      @@pattiannepascual not that I know of.

  • @tabandken8562
    @tabandken8562 Год назад +8

    I LOVE this string method. I'm doing my first summer garden on my tiny lot and I'm doing the string method for trellising. I'm experimenting with planting close. My garden beds are 4x6. I have 6 strings per "row" and they are about a foot apart. That's 42 plants per bed! So far, it's ok. Hopefully it remains ok. I have the spacing towards the sun so all plants should get equal light.

    • @MissBetsyLu
      @MissBetsyLu Год назад

      Wow. Did you get buried under cucumbers?

  • @pauljjohnson
    @pauljjohnson Месяц назад

    Great video

  • @user-or2bd3vz1z
    @user-or2bd3vz1z Месяц назад +2

    Your video totally explains why my zucchini and cucumbers died when they were so small. I thought it was some sort of bug, but this explains it better. We have very few bees on Ocracoke island. Thank you.

    • @reenaarya2801
      @reenaarya2801 13 дней назад

      My zucchini also suffer from same problem . Great information will use on my zucchini & other plants .

  • @cassandraberger9146
    @cassandraberger9146 Год назад +4

    This is fabulous! I learned so much. Now I understand what I was doing wrong right from the beginning of cucumber season 👍👏You’re a great teacher! Btw you got me to try “Jacks” fertilizers maybe 2yrs ago now & it’s 100% better than anything on the market! Oh & the string trellising! Game changer! you have really helped me, keep um coming
    👋👩🏻‍🌾Hello from NJ🍅🌻🥒

  • @ellyreimert8973
    @ellyreimert8973 Год назад +4

    I just found your channel and immediately subscribed !
    You speak so clear and precise and detailed. Thank you !
    I recently started growing tomatoes here in Florida, (not really knowing what I was doing ) and was so proud of my first tomato that I was going to pick the next day ( I only had one tomato) .
    The next day when the big event came to pick the tomato it was completely eaten up !

    • @judyingram-kh1vm
      @judyingram-kh1vm Год назад

      So did I. I'm nearly 64 years old I I learned more about cucumbers from this young man than any one else😅

  • @kevinmelanson3282
    @kevinmelanson3282 Час назад

    In going in 4 yrs doing exactly what your saying. Tomatoes start intdoors and do awesome. Peppers i kill with massachusetts frost

  • @livingtherufflife
    @livingtherufflife 2 года назад

    Ty great tips i learned new things!!

  • @lizardman1303
    @lizardman1303 Год назад +3

    Maybe next year I’ll have to try that thicker 1/8 wire . I just bought some 8 dollar wire and went back and fourth a couple of times and used a string trellis for my cucumber . I tried this method a couple of years back but had such bad results . My cucumbers curled and were so small but it was during such a long heat wave every day over 100 degrees

  • @gretroman8235
    @gretroman8235 2 года назад +7

    Great video. Will have to try the two cucumber varities you mentioned. Am trying vertical gardening using your tomato stake product. I already do some contai er and raised bed gardening. Back and knees are wearing out so vertical is a good fit for me. Hope it works.

    • @AnitaSouthall
      @AnitaSouthall Год назад +1

      A fellow gardening person asked why don't I plant directly into the ground. My answer is two people who use walking sticks will not be bending down to check out the plants! #disabilityawareness

  • @Pausereflectandbreathe
    @Pausereflectandbreathe 2 года назад +1

    Wonderful tips! Thank you! Now I have to pay attention on planting new seeds. 😊❤️🙏

  • @bhupalkattel2870
    @bhupalkattel2870 Месяц назад

    This is one of the best gardening videos Inhave ever watched, thank you. It has so many tips with reasons that nake sense. This guy really knows alot !!

  • @kli8806
    @kli8806 Год назад +5

    I find that feeding my potted cucumbers diluted fertilizer once every other day keeps them healthy and growing all summer long. It helps that it is free as it is a certain sterile, by-product of metabolism.

    • @pennyk2798
      @pennyk2798 Год назад

      For our plot at the community garden we add a little liquid kelp fertilizer to give some extra oomph - and a lovely brown shade. 1-2 oz is enough for 1 gallon of the basic high-nitrogen mixture. (Ratio: 6 oz diluted 20:1 = 126 oz + 2 oz kelp = 128 oz = 1 gallon)

  • @valerie362
    @valerie362 2 года назад +4

    As always, thank you!! I'm totally going to look for the kind in tip #4 next spring. Living in the suburbs we don't have a lot of pollinators, so I have to hand pollinate all of my cucurbits.
    My slicing cucumbers are doing something weird and it may be because of the live hard die hard. The new leaves on the new vines look like they're not going to open, but eventually do they're just smaller than the others. I can't find a disease that does that. I've got more pests this year than last though, so it could also be some weird tropical bug.

    • @Pausereflectandbreathe
      @Pausereflectandbreathe 2 года назад +3

      Plant flowers that bees and butterflies love and they'll find it. After years of being ignorant about pollinators, that's what I did and the bees are buzzing around my garden happily and had colorful butterflies visiting the garden. I tell them to bring their friends over and I think they listened. 😂 Our neighbor said that for 3 years of living in our neighborhood, she haven't seen a bee and suddenly after that, she's happy to see bees again. ❤️🙏

  • @pamsmith7369
    @pamsmith7369 9 дней назад

    Good tip ion mulching cukes!
    I’ll try that! Trying burpless this year. The ones that are not give off chemicals that apparently attract negative insects. The burpless ones do not so won’t attract nefarious insects to those plants.
    I’m giving that a try!
    I self-pollinate as well.

  • @elmartell5724
    @elmartell5724 2 месяца назад

    I'm very fortunate to have half a million bees in my backyard whose herb garden fence my cucumbers grow up

  • @katallen4021
    @katallen4021 Год назад +6

    Thanks for thoroughly covering this subject. You have really improved my gardening know-how!

  • @maryelizabethcalais9180
    @maryelizabethcalais9180 Год назад +5

    HI, your videos are helpful for my gardening; thanks for your time doing these :)
    I'm using all natural bark mulch from a tree service co in my area. I also cover the mulch with dried wheat straw from farmers in my area. What are your thoughts on using both? My residence is in sub-tropical Louisiana..... VERY hot and humid :)

    • @donnakay1828
      @donnakay1828 Год назад +1

      I live in southern LA.
      I use either cardboard and dry straw or hardwood bark mulch and dry straw.
      It $$$ to have your plants stay great with no to barely any disease and being here in, Louisiana, you need a double barrier, medium on your choice of bottom layer and go thinner for top choice, be careful not to smother around all stems leave about 2-3 inches away from stem, and water underneath, just not on stem! This works wonders, even in raised beds, my friend's, they started raised beds this year, next year, I will start the same. Raised beds are way better and very less time consuming in these hot 🥵 scorching and bk2bk 🌧️ we get in, Louisiana.
      I've always grown spreading row's and ground straight for years. BUT considering how terrible Louisiana's heat has become, and health reasons are a must for me, I definitely see their raised beds working amazing! They planted 6 🍅 plants in 1 4x8 raised bed, 4x8 6 different cucumbers, 4x8 6 different peppers placed each 2ft apart and before adding their soil/fertilizer/mulch, they built easy/added 6inch wide and 10 ft tall regular wooden stakes into the inner sides of wood bed and measured the separate spots for each plant, then made sure bed's were each flat ground, no cracks for seeping water and by doing raised beds it 🛑 ants on inside and all low type critters that gets 5-6 inches tall 😂 but it truly is way better than spread ground gardening! They added, but keeping away 4-6 inches from stem hardwood mulch all spread out through the soil and covered especially in center between plants about 1/2 INCH thickness, and then, they added a small thin thin layer of about 1/2 inch from every plants stem's, and a little thicker, not too thick, you can still see the hardwood well, they did dry straw over top, my friend's do like, I do, we make sure to keep 2-4 inches away from all stems, depends on how big the stem of whatever plants you're growing to know exactly how far away from stem you don't want to place mulch around for all plants underneath not on stem watering! Hopefully this helps you, or anybody else 🙏

  • @audreyhandy9273
    @audreyhandy9273 Год назад

    Your garden is beautiful! Thank u so much about the info pertaining to mulching cucumbers.

  • @leeannluigi1644
    @leeannluigi1644 Год назад

    Great video!! Thank you so much 💕

  • @bot.123
    @bot.123 Год назад +5

    Also, heads up... As soon as one cucumber starts yellowing, the plant is essentially dead. The plant think the job is done. Pick them ripe, don't let them stay on the vine :)

  • @sarahkirbach5040
    @sarahkirbach5040 Год назад +7

    Got my beit alphas growing, also tried parthenocarpic Diva a hybrid old AL Gardener used to grow. He grew the super sweet 100 cherry tomatoes as well 👍🏻 I’m so excited to see how everything goes! I’m lazy, so I start my cucs & zucs in the ground bc the clay soil keeps them in the ground & I just monitor for pests. I plan on taking your succession planting advice and plan ting a second row today 😊I also grow a long row of cucumbers so if I lose some plants it’s ok. Thanks so much for sharing MG!

  • @essserleem3254
    @essserleem3254 7 месяцев назад

    Well explained. Thanks.

  • @Yah-Izoa-Hakaboth
    @Yah-Izoa-Hakaboth Год назад +1

    Oh shoot man! What a small world. We are both in the same state! That’s so cool! I was literally thinking of fresh cucumbers 🥒 from a garden and your video popped up in my feed! Only GOD knows our thoughts! ☺️ I would start my own, but I live in a apartment complex and I would definitely get evicted if I started one here haha. But yes, the humidity gets awful here in the NC! But I thank the Good LORD that it’s 66° right now tonight!

  • @dianaanderson6448
    @dianaanderson6448 2 года назад +3

    The place you're looking for is Hawaii for those temperatures

    • @lifemademary
      @lifemademary 7 месяцев назад

      But…not cheap to live there.

  • @urbanchaostocountrypeace5133
    @urbanchaostocountrypeace5133 Год назад +3

    That's exactly why I waited. We had it drop to 40 the last couple days. I'm still getting the ground ready for planting cucumbers. I just got my corn in the ground. I didn't know about the bark multch, that's a great tip. My family always used straw. I'm definitely going to try that this week. Love the vertical system. I just started doing thst last year. Thank you very much

  • @lisakaput1376
    @lisakaput1376 11 месяцев назад +1

    This is really helpful

  • @DaleSanger
    @DaleSanger Год назад

    Thanks for including Celsius temperatures in the captions

  • @EarlyDev
    @EarlyDev 6 месяцев назад +3

    POV: Watching this video 1 week after planting spacemaster 80 and already planting it into my real garden...

  • @davidclark7584
    @davidclark7584 Год назад +3

    I pollinate my veggies by hand because all the bee's are dead. Gotta love chem lawn and chem trails.

    • @chuckb1448
      @chuckb1448 Месяц назад

      All the bugs are dying.... but call it stratospheric aerosol injection.... you will feel "scientific"

  • @SB-bs7uv
    @SB-bs7uv Год назад +2

    Never heard of succession planting before today but it makes sense and I will definately be trying it. Thanks

  • @ann8240
    @ann8240 Год назад

    I’m so glad I found you !! It took me 5 years to figure out my garden. It actually looks pretty close to yours . Now the fine tuning ! Namaste 🙌🏼💫🍅🥑🌶🔪