Monday, January 28, 2019

How to Use Days to Maturity on a Seed Packet to Help You Be a Better Gardener

How to Use Days to Maturity on a Seed Packet to Help You Be a Better Gardener

I remember the first time I bought seeds for my garden. They were tomatoes, and the packet read "75 days to maturity."

Great! I thought. If I start them in March, I'll be picking tomatoes by May.

So imagine my confusion when the first tomatoes weren't ready for harvest until the end of June — and this was in a Southern California garden that received ample warmth and sunshine.

It had me looking more closely at other dates of maturity on my seed packets: 80 days for melons, 65 days for cucumbers, 90 days for sweet peppers, 100 days for winter squash. Sometimes the numbers were off by several weeks, and sometimes they were right on point (give or take a few days).

Why the discrepancies? And why did it seem like most major seed suppliers printed the "wrong" figures on their packets?

There is no simple answer to the mystery that is "days to maturity" or "days to harvest," common terms that are used interchangeably in the gardening world.

If you've been puzzled by this very thing, here's what you need to know about those numbers.

Golden Sweet snow peas on the vine

First, what does maturity mean?

Plant maturity is a term used with annual flowers and vegetables to indicate when the plants flower or set fruit. When it comes to vegetables, however, maturity is not so well defined.

It is generally accepted that maturity is the point in which you can start picking vegetables, whether they're ripened fruits (such as tomatoes and eggplants), flower buds (such as broccoli and artichokes),...

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from Garden Betty http://bit.ly/2FW0cxN

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