What Is a Good State for Growing Vegetables? Whats a Good State for Gardening?
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Tagged with: gardening • Growing Vegetables
Filed under: Your Garden Q and A
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Tagged with: gardening • Growing Vegetables
Filed under: Your Garden Q and A
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Florida. You can grow just about anything.
Ohio is good. I grow a variety myself but years ago we subcribed to a vegetable co-op and they grew almost every veggie under the sun.
Ohio has four seasons, meaning you can’t garden in winter, except for pruning.
Is there a difference between "growing vegetables" and "gardening"?
I live in Kentucky and we have a fairly long growing season.
One’s climate and last/first frost dates plus temperature determines the kinds of veggies/flowers that you can grow. In Canada they cannot grow pineapples. In Florida they cannot grow apples. See? there are differences that show up.
A plant needs a variety of things: water, air and soil, warmth or cold, good rich soil or less rich soil. All depends upon the veggie/plant reqiore,ments. The County Extension Agent in each city knows the area and is a source of advice.
Kentucky looks like England too.
I would think that Washington is a good state to grow. It gets a lot of rain and has a relatively long season. A lot of evergreen producers grow out there because of the climate.
I can tell you this, though, that the midwest absolutely sucks for landscaping and gardening.
In a state of "happiness"
However, the best state for gardening and growing veggies has to be California. The Salinas Valley has so many fruits and vegetables coming from that area that goes all over the world!