Monday, August 25, 2014

3 Plants To Companion Plant With Cucumbers



Companion planting has a long and documented history. While there has yet to be any serious scientific research into whether companion planting actual works the anecdotal evidence is intriguing. There are as many companion planting combinations as there are garden plants so the choices can be daunting. I wanted to narrow it down a little bit by talking about cucumber and what companions are suitable for them.



Radishes

Radishes are a quick growing early planted crop that pairs quite well with cucumbers. They do a couple things that really work well with cucumbers. The season that they can grow in starts quite early, much earlier than you can start hot sun loving cucumbers. So you can grow and harvest a crop of radishes before you transplant a cucumber seedling. The radishes will leave the soil loose and well worked easy for cucumber roots to penetrate.


What else the radishes do is that they repel the cucumber beetle which can wreak all sorts of havoc on your cucumbers. In some regions you can even underseed a crop of radishes towards the end of the season of the cucumber and get a third crop from the same garden plot.

Corn

Corn one of the mainstays of US agriculture is the most grown crop in the United States with 87.7 million acres harvested in 2013. But despite its large stature in American agriculture it to has a place in the humble backyard garden. By now some of you are thinking about growing some delicious sweet corn in your garden but perhaps you should consider growing a flint or a popcorn variety instead.[1]


So what does corn do for cucumbers in the garden. Well in terms of actually providing some sort of benefit like pest prevention or nutrients it is much more passive than that. They simply grow well together, the cucumbers provide a leafy ground covering for the corn and the corn is simply there, but on some occasions corn provides support for cucumber vines. A down side to this pairing would be the high use of water and nutrients in that section of the garden. It made need more hands on fertilizing and tlc but I feel the benefits of being able to plant two space hungry crops in one location is just great.


Beans

Beans especially pole beans are great to plant with cucumbers. The beans being a legume are capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen into the soil adding much needed nitrogen to feed hungry plants. It's great to plant beans with both corn and cucumbers as all three form a symbiosis called the Three Sisters. These three types of plants grow very well together with the beans providing nutrition, the corn serving as a trellis for the beans and the cucumber providing moisture retention and weed control for the all the plants.


By finding the right combinations you can greatly enhance your gardens growth, productivity and ease of maintenance. There are many resources out there to help you along the companion planting path if you want to explore more. One of the best resources out there is a book called Carrots love Tomatoes by Lousie Riotte, it is considered the bible of companion planting to many gardeners out there.

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