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Horticultural Uses of Soil. Vegetable Culture. Most important crop by total value Grown throughout U.S. Concentrated in economic production areas like California. Vegetable Culture. Soil Selection Coarse soils: Warm rapidly in spring Allow early planting/harvest – better prices
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Vegetable Culture • Most important crop by total value • Grown throughout U.S. • Concentrated in economic production areas like California
Vegetable Culture • Soil Selection Coarse soils: • Warm rapidly in spring • Allow early planting/harvest – better prices • Best for early crop growth – cool season crops • Melons need drainage • Usually irrigated
Vegetable Culture Medium-textured soils • Good for all crops • Used where yields are more important than early harvest Fine-textured soils • Less desirable for vegetables Organic soils • Favorites for cool season and root crops
Vegetable Culture In summary: • Soils for growing vegetables should be loose, friable, and high in humus • The most essential factor is good drainage
Vegetable Culture Soil management • Most use conventional tillage • Drainage may be needed • Conservation tillage poses challenges • Raised beds improve drainage • Organic matter difficult to maintain • Many vegetables are inefficient fertilizer users
Vegetable Culture Soil management (continued) • Irrigated sands leach readily/low fertility • Calcium movement into edible plant parts is slow • blossom-end rot of tomatoes and cracked stems in celery typical • Starter solutions used on transplants • high in phosphate • overcome immobility • stimulate rapid rooting
Fruit Culture Differs from most crops: • Usually long-lived woody plants • Remain in place many years • Influences soil management
Fruit Culture • Soil selection • Require well-drained soils to 3-4 ft deep • Tolerate wide pH ranges • note blueberries pH 4.3-4.8 • Favor hillsides for growing apples • Allows drainage of cold air • Controls for erosion hazard noted
Fruit Culture Tolerate wide range of soil texture • Apples and Pears – finer-textured soils • Plums and Peaches – coarser texture • Grapes – sandy or gravelly texture • Berry crops – moderately coarse texture
Fruit Culture • Soil management • Long-term crop • Site should be carefully selected • Soil must be prepared before planting • Nitrogen is the most important nutrient for the established fruit crop • Note hazard of excess N; shortages of others
Fruit Culture • Many fruit crops are clean-cultivated • Loss of O.M. • Poor tilth • Erosion hazard • Alternatives: • Mulch or cultivate in rows • Sod between rows
Nursery Field Culture Growing nursery stock is very hard on soil!!! • Clean-cultivated • Little crop residue • Soil is dug up and removed with balled and burlapped trees and evergreens
Nursery Field Culture Site Selection • Land should be level or terraced • Well-drained • pH between 5.5 and 6.5 • Texture varies with harvest method • Bare root – sandy or sandy loam • Balled and burlapped – finer textures better • Silt loam or Clay loam preferred
Nursery Field Culture Soil management: • Organic matter maintenance critical • Consider rotate with green manure • Apply animal manures or sewage sludge • Plant cover crops between rows • Mulch in rows • Sod row middles • “living mulch” of winter rye; killed with herbicide when tree begins growth – dead rye acts as mulch
Container Growing One of the most demanding ways to grow! • Requires constant attention to watering, fertilizing, and other practices; however . . . • Container grower has complete control over soil conditions • Enables growing large crop of uniform, quality plants • Interiorscaping • Apartment dwellers • Home owners
Container Growing Differs from growing in ground in key way: • Plant’s root system confined to small soil volume that must supply all the plant’s water and nutrient needs • Must water and fertilize far more than when growing in ground
Container Growing Six areas of consideration • Naturally poor drainage • Types of potting soil • Soil sterilization • Soluble salts and alkalinity • Soil temperature • Water pollution
Landscaping • Landscapers must understand how soils, roots, and water interact • Landscape soils are complex • Radically altered by construction and landscaping • Soils of different textures mix; creates interfaces
Landscaping • Site and Plant Selection should match • Avoid Compaction • Proper Planting Depth • Transplanting success requires rapid root growth • Amending soil pH may be necessary • Fertilize Established Trees
Landscaping • Turf • Most common element of a landscape • Avoid interfaces of “black dirt” • Till in new soils and compost amendments • Watch high nitrogen fertilizers (pollution)
Landscaping • Xeriscaping • Landscaping adapted to dry climates • Wide range of plants thrive under low moisture conditions • Cacti • Succulents • Yuccas • Numerous shrubs, trees, and flowers are adaptable and can tolerate dryness • Rose periwinkle • Several salvias