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I have recently moved to a semi-arid part of the Southern Black Hills in South Dakota. Last year I had limited success raising onions, tomatoes, zucchiney, & peppers. I can irrigate the garden, but I am sometimes not at home for extended periods to take care of such chores on a regular basis. Does anyone have suggestions on what vegetables I should be planting that can do well under dry conditions?
I have recently moved to a semi-arid part of the Southern Black Hills in South Dakota. Last year I had limited success raising onions, tomatoes, zucchiney, & peppers. I can irrigate the garden, but I am sometimes not at home for extended periods to take care of such chores on a regular basis. Does anyone have suggestions on what vegetables I should be planting that can do well under dry conditions?
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You could put a drip irrigation system on a timer. Otherwise, I doubt much will grow with semi-arid conditions combined with erratic watering. We grew tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant on our patio in Tucson, but that surely did require some watering! Good luck.
Thanks for the quick reply. I am also considering putting the plants out earlier in the season when there is more moisture and cooler temps. I live in a banana belt that warms up faster than the surrounding countryside. I have some styrofoam cones in case I get too early a start.
Since Amaranth is a grain crop, rather than a veggie, something else might be more practical in a garden.
Okra is probably drought tolerant, but it does best in hot humid climates such as Louisiana or Mississippi. Probably not for hot, dry climates that one finds in a semi-arid region.
I have recently moved to a semi-arid part of the Southern Black Hills in South Dakota. Last year I had limited success raising onions, tomatoes, zucchiney, & peppers. I can irrigate the garden, but I am sometimes not at home for extended periods to take care of such chores on a regular basis. Does anyone have suggestions on what vegetables I should be planting that can do well under dry conditions?
uh
Unlike xeriscape planting for flowers and greenery growing normal vegetables requires a commitment in care, especially they will be in need of regular watering. My first thought was to look for a community garden to work in where someone else might be responsible for the watering needed or a timed irrigation set up might be in place. Or you can install a timed irrigation system in your garden area. That would be the best answer to not being there to water the veggies.
Another option might be a container planted system where you can water it every so often and the water is collected in a reservoir system and wicked back to the plants for a period of time. I know several gardeners who have done this with porch and patio planters when they are gone for a week long vacation. I did a quick search and didn't find perfect examples but here are a DIY cheaper version and an example of a purchased set in use: How To Make A Self-Watering Container & Planter | Urban Organic Gardener
The more drought resistant veggies out there usually have deep roots such as squashes and melons. Dark Star zucchini are supposed to do well in drier conditions. Cucumbers can be used in fairly dry conditions and, once established prefer to be watered less often than any people realize. If tomatoes have had a chance to get deep roots they can take some neglect in dry conditions, the best/strongest are usually cherry tomatoes although I've heard good things about the 'HeatWaveII' tomato for hot and dry conditions, too.
I live in basically a high desert, very arid, hot dry summers. I have a raised bed garden, and an irrigation system on a timer. Garden pretty much takes care of itself.
Absolutely get a dripper system for your garden. You can just forget it for as long as you want and the plants are happy cause they are getting water. Without it here in Phoenix area, nothing would ever grow since we get 7 inches of moisture a year.
Thanks for the answers everyone. I am convinced I will have to set up an irrigation system with a timer. Also as suggested we will be focusing more on melons, squash's, etc. We still have zucchini's from last year and I plan to start our tomatoes earlier so they have a chance to become established before the hot weather waether hits. I'll just have to watch the weather reports for frost warnings and cover them.
Thanks again,
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