Greenhouse Gardening
Extend your growing season or
experiment with different plant varieties
What to Grow, When
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If
Not Bees, Who?
In nature, flowers are pollinated by insects, wind,
birds, bats, and so on. Without natural pollinators
in greenhouses, who does the work of moving pollen from
the male to the female flower parts, so fertilization
and fruit and seed production can occur? Fortunately,
many crops that produce edible fruits or seeds have
both stamens (male parts) and pistils (female parts)
in the same flowers. Pollination occurs easily since
the parts are arranged to facilitate pollen transfer.
Greenhouse crops such as tomatoes, peppers, and beans
are in this category. You can help pollinate them by
shaking them gently from time to time. Special European
varieties of greenhouse cucumbers are designed to bear
fruit without pollination. If you and your students
want to try to "play the bees," you can do
so with regular garden cucumbers, melons, or squash.
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What you choose to grow, and when,
depends on your curriculum goals and student interests, climate,
and the type of greenhouse you have. See Greenhouse
Climates for more information on different types.
Generally speaking, a greenhouse that can maintain a minimum
of 60°F at night can grow almost any crop year-round. Most
school greenhouses have some limitations, but think of the greenhouse
as a microclimate of your outdoor growing conditions. You will
be more successful if you match the needs of the plants you
grow to your particular greenhouse conditions, just as you would
consider your hardiness zone for growing plants outside.
It would be quite frustrating, for example, to attempt to meet
the needs of a banana tree (which requires bright light and
warm temperatures) in a cool northern greenhouse. What you
grow also varies seasonally. Check for pests before
bringing any garden plants inside.
Fall
Possibilities
- bulbs for forcing
- lichen and moss terraria
- seedlings of cool-season crops (Chinese greens, collards,
lettuce, herbs) to put in greenhouse beds
- plants retrieved from the gardenexperiment
by digging up some annual flowers, vegetables, or herbs to
see what survives the change
Winter Stalwarts
- plants harvested from the fall garden
- forced branches of pussy willows, forsythia, apple blossoms
if you have a heated greenhouse or live in a warm climate
- tender perennials to overwinter if you have a cold greenhouse
- nothing, if you have an unheated greenhouse in a cold climate
Early Spring
Dandies
- seedlings for outdoor gardens
- herbs, vegetable plants, flower plants for plant sale
- seedlings for warm-season crops
(tomatoes, melons, cucumbers) to grow in greenhouse beds through
the summer
Summer
Sweeties
- warm-season crops (tomatoes, cucumbers, eggplants, melons)
in greenhouse beds, particularly in areas with a short growing
season
- perennials from seed or cuttings
- tropical crops (figs, citrus fruits, bananas)