The heat index has been over 110F here in Texas. Obviously it gets hot in summer, but this is a bit earlier than usual.

Leave a comment if you know of any heat tolerant vegetables and cover crops that still grow and produce during excessive heat.

Vegetables:

  1. Okra (Crimson Spineless and Heavy Hitter)
  2. Eggplant
  3. Pepper
  4. Lettuce of unknown variety under a shade cloth.
  5. Tomatillo
  6. Watermelon (Black Diamond)
  7. Butternut Squash
  8. Recently planted Saturn Peach tree is doing ok if I water every other day.

Cover crops:

Sorghum-Sudangrass (I’m using this to cover the ground, produce biomass and to assist with compaction).

Miscellaneous notes:

Lettuce under shade cloth is somehow growing, I figured it would have died by now.

My tomatoes are producing albiet slower than before.

Cucumber seems to have stopped growing.

Jardelle Pumpkin transplants are doing ok with afternoon shade.

2nd planting of Corn tasselled way too early.

  • SightlineOP
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    10 months ago

    Update: everything is still alive, however some plants are in “standby mode”.

    I found the real solution to my quest: selective breeding. David the Good on YouTube has a video about it, and the book he references has a .pdf available for free.

  • @casey@dirtbag.social
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    210 months ago

    Malabar spinach Cowpeas/asparagus beans Sweet potatoes

    For tomatoes, stick to hybrid cherry types for best performance. Mid/large size ones will start dropping flowers when the lows get above 80F or so.

  • @wshhh
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    110 months ago

    I know nothing, except I’m I’m in a similar climate and my hot peppers and cucumbers are doing well but banana and bell are hurting. It’s very strange but may have something to do with pH, maybe? All of my stuff is in the ground and I did very little prep.

  • @jman6495
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    15 months ago

    Perhaps basil with the tomatoes?

    • SightlineOP
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      15 months ago

      Cherry tomatoes grew fine over the summer. Most things just needed low intensity morning sun then shade afterwards. I planted a couple trees to help out.