Prilep are looking good and coming along nicely.
Tomato plants and baby tomatoes. Plenty of blooms.
Corn, beans, and some of the squash. Corn has tasseled and several have emerging silks. Believe it or not, there are about 60 corn stalks there and should pollinate great with my swirling winds.
I found another good use for used 1020 trays without holes. (Cleaned with chlorox) They make good water reservoirs. (Of course) They also prevent the dry, dry ground from sucking the moisture from the fabric grow bags. A barrier between the ground sponge and the grow bags makes a big difference. Now with water reservoirs under the squash, pumpkins, and tobacco, I can water once in the morning rather than three times a day. The plants no longer wilt down to the ground. They stand up better during the heat of day, aren't dried completely dry, and don't look like they're on the verge of death. Here is a 1020 tray under two 3 gal. grow bags, 2 squash plants per grow bag, total of 4 squash plants. They can now stand tall all day. Harvesting plenty of squash. I prefer setting the squash grow bags inside 7 gal. plastic pots (I ran out) because the fabric pots have no support, the squash just flop over on the side and the top of the fabric just lays over with them. The 7 gal. plastic pots are taller and provide support for the squash limbs and allow the squash to stand tall and avoid the insects and disease on the ground. There was more of a learning curve involved in switching to grow bags but I'm slowing learning the good and bad and making adjustments. Next year should be a lot easier. My idea of intentionally crowding all the plants to find out how many plants is too many plants is not working out as well as I thought, they are all thriving. 2 squash per 3 gal. grow bags is working great since they now have structural support from the 7 gal. plastic pots. 2 corn plus 4 pole beans works like a charm and I rarely need to water. I put in enough bush beans to shade the soil and there is very little moisture loss. I water them about once a week. The beans pull nitogen from the air and put them into the soil for the use of the corn, which require more nitrogen. I fertilize all the plants about every 2 weeks and nothing seems to be hurting for nitrogen. One tomato plant per 3 gal. bag was just right. They need water once every morning.
