Idaho
Succession planting in eastern Idaho gardens – East Idaho News
Now is the perfect time to plan for your spring garden. During the winter months, gardeners can reflect on last year’s successes and challenges, research new crops, and design a planting schedule. By preparing early, you can optimize your planting strategy and make this spring your most productive gardening season yet.
One method to consider is succession planting, where crops are planted at intervals throughout the growing season, rather than all at once. This approach helps extend the harvest and maximize the use of garden space. For Eastern Idaho gardeners, succession planting is especially valuable, as it can stretch harvests from early spring to late fall.
In Eastern Idaho, the growing season is often short and unpredictable. By understanding timing, selecting the right crops, and planting in stages, gardeners can enjoy a more abundant harvest despite varying weather conditions.
The variety of plants in this planter box demonstrates the concept of succession planting, where crops are planted in stages to ensure a continuous harvest throughout the growing season. As one crop matures and is harvested, another can take its place, making the most of the available space and extending the garden’s productivity.
Benefits of Succession Planting
Succession planting offers several advantages, particularly in a climate like Eastern Idaho’s. One primary benefit is increased yield. By planting crops at intervals, your garden produces steadily over time instead of all at once, ensuring a continuous harvest. This approach also helps prevent the glut of crops often seen when planting everything simultaneously.
Another benefit is extending your harvest season. Succession planting allows you to plant crops suited for different stages of the year. Cool-season crops like lettuce, spinach, and peas can be planted early in the spring, followed by warm-season crops like tomatoes and beans once the weather warms. Later in the season, you can plant quick-maturing vegetables like radishes and turnips, which can be harvested before the first frost. By staggering plantings, you ensure a steady supply of fresh vegetables throughout the growing season.
Additionally, succession planting allows efficient use of garden space. As one crop is harvested, it can be replaced with another, ensuring no space is left idle for long. This method maximizes the productivity of your garden, making it ideal for gardeners with limited space.
Planning and Timing
Effective succession planting requires careful planning and timing. The key is designing your garden to accommodate multiple plantings throughout the season while understanding each crop’s needs.
When planning your garden, map out planting areas to maximize available space. For example, cool-season crops like lettuce and spinach thrive in cooler temperatures, while warm-season crops like tomatoes and beans need full sun and warmth. You should rotate crops and track when and where you plant them to optimize space and keep your garden productive.
Timing is crucial for succession planting. Cool-season crops like lettuce, spinach, peas, and radishes thrive in cool conditions and can be planted early in the spring, often before the last frost. These crops mature quickly, in 30-60 days, making them ideal for early-season planting. After harvesting them, you can plant warm-season crops or another round of cool-season crops.
Warm-season crops like beans, tomatoes, peppers, and squash require warmer temperatures and should be planted after the threat of frost has passed, typically in late spring. These crops take longer to mature, often 60-90 days, so careful planning is needed to ensure they have enough time to mature before the first frost.
Quick-growing crops like radishes, turnips, and greens mature in 30-40 days and are perfect for filling gaps between slower-growing crops. These fast growers can be planted after harvesting early crops, ensuring a continuous harvest.
Crop Selection for Succession Planting
Choosing the right crops is key for success in succession planting, especially in Eastern Idaho’s variable climate. Below are some ideal crops for succession planting:
Cool-season crops can tolerate light frosts and thrive in early spring. They’re perfect for planting as soon as the soil is workable.
- Lettuce: Grows quickly and can be harvested in 30-40 days. Ideal for multiple plantings throughout the season.
- Spinach: Hardy and quick-growing, spinach matures in 40-50 days.
- Radishes: Ready in as little as 30 days, making them perfect for succession planting.
- Peas: Plant early in spring and harvest in 60-70 days.
- Kale: Thrives in cooler temperatures and can be harvested multiple times throughout the season.
Warm-season crops need higher temperatures and should be planted after the last frost, typically in late spring.
- Tomatoes: Require full sun and warmth. Harvest in late summer.
- Beans: Quick-growing, typically maturing in 60-70 days. Perfect for planting after early crops.
- Squash: Needs a long growing period. Plant after the last frost.
- Peppers: Require warmth and take 70-90 days to mature.
Quick-growing crops mature in 30-40 days, perfect for filling gaps between other crops.
- Turnips: Ready in 30-60 days, ideal for early or late-season planting.
- Arugula: A fast-growing leafy green, maturing in about 30 days.
- Mustard Greens: Another quick grower that thrives in cool weather.
- Beets: Matures quickly, ideal for filling gaps in the season.
Tips for Crop Selection in Eastern Idaho
When selecting crops for succession planting, consider Eastern Idaho’s growing season and soil conditions. Cool-season crops, such as lettuce and peas, can handle frost, making them ideal for early planting. Warm-season crops like tomatoes, beans, and squash should wait until the soil and air warm up in late spring.
Also, keep soil health in mind. Succession planting often involves planting in the same soil multiple times, so crop rotation is essential. Some crops, such as legumes (peas, beans), help replenish nitrogen in the soil, which benefits subsequent plantings. Adding compost and organic matter will help maintain soil fertility throughout the growing season.
Succession planting is a great way to maximize your harvest, especially in Eastern Idaho, where the growing season can be short. By selecting the right crops, timing your plantings carefully, and using your space efficiently, you can enjoy a continuous supply of fresh produce throughout the growing season. Whether you have a small garden or a larger plot, succession planting can help you make the most of your garden, even in challenging climates.
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Idaho
Dorothy Moon reelected to third term as Idaho GOP chair
MERIDIAN — Former Idaho state Rep. Dorothy Moon was elected to her third term as chair of the Idaho Republican Party during last week’s Idaho GOP Convention in Meridian.
Moon announced her candidacy for a third term as chair earlier this month after first being elected in 2022 and again in 2024. In this year’s election, Moon received 306 votes, former Idaho state Sen. Steven Thayn received 155 votes and Mark Fuller, the previous Idaho GOP first vice chair, came in third with 134 votes. In receiving just over 51% of the vote, Moon was able to narrowly avoid a runoff.
In his challenge to Moon, Thayn called for fostering a greater sense of unity among members of the party.
“Unity does not mean uniformity of opinion,” Thayn said in a prior news release on his candidacy. “Nor does it mean forced agreement. Forced unity always leads to tyranny. Real unity is voluntary. It is built through listening, respect, and a sincere effort to solve problems together.”
In the initial announcement of Moon’s campaign, she highlighted improvements to voter turnout and the defeat of the 2024 ranked-choice voting ballot initiative as among key party successes during her most recent term.
Idaho
Large police presence near Taco Bell in Blackfoot – East Idaho News
BLACKFOOT — A large contingent of Blackfoot Police officers has cordoned off an area near the Taco Bell on Parkway Drive in Blackfoot.
Police responded around 5 p.m., according to multiple witnesses who contacted EastIdahoNews.com.
EastIdahoNews.com has reached out to Blackfoot Police for details.
We will update this story as we learn more.
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Idaho
Idaho angler reels in record 43.25-inch lake trout at Payette Lake
MISSOULA, Mont. — An Idaho Falls angler is back in the Idaho record books after landing a record-setting lake trout at Payette Lake.
Idaho Fish and Game said Dylan Smith caught and released a 43.25-inch lake trout on May 2, setting a new state catch-and-release record for the species. The fish surpassed the previous record of 42 inches.
The catch marks Smith’s second appearance in Idaho’s record books. He previously held the state catch-and-release lake trout record after landing a trophy fish in 2018 before that mark was later broken.
According to Fish and Game, Payette Lake has become one of Idaho’s premier lake trout fisheries thanks to years of management efforts aimed at improving both lake trout and kokanee populations.
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