Vegetables

Production and Harvesting

Vegetable production requires only a small area of land and minimal outlay. What vegetables you decide to grow commercially depends on a variety of factors. Here you’ll find information on growing and harvesting vegetables, including potatoes, tomatoes, cucumbers, zucchini, beans, squash, corn, onions, garlic, broccoli, peppers, and asparagus. You’ll also find tips on high tunnel production, irrigation, pollinators, seeding, and transplanting.

How to Plant Vegetables

There is a wide variety of species and varieties to choose from if you want to grow vegetables commercially. Each has its own specific requirements when it comes to soil conditions, optimum growing temperature, essential nutrients, prime location, and cropping systems. You must also take weed and pest management into consideration.

When deciding on the best vegetables to grow, knowing the difference between cool-season and warm-season vegetables is key. First and last frost dates are also crucial to know. Cool-season plants are the first ones to plant, anytime from several weeks to a couple of months before the last frost date. Warm-season crops require higher air and soil temperatures and you should never plant them before the last frost date.

It’s important to note that you can extend the growing season with the use of high tunnels. The controlled environment and season extension characteristics of high tunnels widen the production opportunities for growers. Using hot beds is an option that’s more suited for small scale production.

Crop planning begins the year before, typically in early winter. Organize your crops in the winter and your production will be smoother. Plan the seed order, bed preparation schedule, greenhouse seeding, direct seeding, and transplanting schedule.

A harvest record sheet and detailed map are also useful. You may decide you want to grow fall-planted cover crops to improve soil health so these should feature into your schedule. Crop rotation is one of the most fundamental, best management practices and it requires careful planning when deciding where to plant your crops.

Growing Vegetable Plants

There are many different ways you can maximize your growing space, particularly in the small vegetable garden. Succession planting, interplanting, and relay planting are just a few options. Crop rotation is also key to successful vegetable production.

If you’re growing vegetables commercially, you may have to comply with the Product Safety Rule. This is one of the new federal food safety regulations written under the 2011 Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA).

Many factors can affect the growth of your vegetables. During the long hot days of summer, for example, some vegetables need heat-proofing and a little extra care, even when they’re heat-loving plants.

To help vegetable growers in the Mid-Atlantic region, Penn State Extension publishes Mid-Atlantic Commercial Vegetable Production Recommendations, which are updated every two years. Resources are also available for specific crops such as microgreens, cucumbers, tomatoes, potatoes, and other specialty or novel vegetables.

Seeding and Transplanting Vegetables

Traditionally, there was a clear separation between vegetables you had to seed directly into the field and those that you could transplant. Now more and more vegetable crops are starting out as greenhouse transplants that you can plant in the field for crop production.

An important step in producing healthy vegetable transplants is the purchase of seed that is high-quality and disease-free. Knowing when to plant and transplant is also key, together with an understanding of seeds and seedling biology. When planting seeds directly into the field or transplanting seedlings, it’s vital that you create optimum conditions for their first few days in the field.

As your vegetable plants grow, some may need support, such as tomatoes. There are many ways you can do this including the construction of a trellis. You can also use stakes, cages, and the Florida Basket Weave method as support for the tomatoes, or you can leave them to grow on the ground unsupported.

Growing Vegetables in Containers

An increasing number of people are experimenting with growing vegetables in containers. Penn State Extension has been involved with trial plantings of fruiting vegetables in containers. As a result, General Recommendations for Growing Vegetables in Containers are available.

More detailed information is also available for specific crops such as:

  • Container grown tomatoes: One of the most popular container vegetable crops and there are some excellent varieties available in seed catalogs and garden centers.
  • Container grown cucumbers, zucchini, and squash: You can grow these very successfully; however, you’ll achieve the best results with container varieties.
  • Container grown peppers: Look for varieties with “compact” or “for containers” on the label.
  • Container grown eggplants: Varieties bred specifically to be compact are compatible with container culture and they not only look great but yield copious amounts of delicious fruits.

Vegetable Plants and Pollination

Vegetable plants that produce fruit require pollination in order to develop fruit. Bees are the stars when it comes to pollination. Everyone knows about the role of honeybees in crop production but native wild bees can be just as efficient pollinators as honeybees. You can encourage native bees into an area by providing a diverse and abundant food source and a place to build their nests. Pollinators play an important role in the setting of pumpkin fruit. The quality of the fruit is further enhanced by intensive pollinator activity. Wild bee populations play a key role in providing pollination of cucurbit crops.

Irrigation for Vegetable Production

Safe use of water is critical in fresh vegetable production. Drip or trickle irrigation is a very efficient method of applying water and nutrients to crops. Generally, vegetable crops require 1-1.5 inches of water per week. When plants are small, they need less, but as they grow their water requirements increase. The time it takes a drip system to apply 1 inch of water depends on the drip tube flow rate and the width the plant roots extend to.

Irrigation systems can be equally effective when you use them in the home garden. However, you must take care and winterize the drip irrigation system so it’s ready for spring.

Harvesting Vegetables

Most vegetables attain their best eating quality when allowed to ripen on the plant. However, when you grow vegetables commercially, harvesting often takes place before this time. You can find optimum times for harvesting in Penn State Extension’s Harvest Calendar.

It can be done by hand or mechanically, or a combination of both. A number of activities are involved when preparing for harvesting and during harvesting itself. As you harvest your crops, you must make sure you keep the produce as clean as possible in order to prevent contamination during harvest. Any water you use for washing produce must meet EPA microbial standards for drinking water. You must follow best practices for keeping produce fresh and safe from harvest through to packing and storage.

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  1. Hombro Amarillo, un desorden fisiológico, que afecta calidad de la fruta./ Yellow shoulder, a physiological disorder, that affects fruit quality.
    Articles
    Refinando la Nutrición en los Tomates: Mejor Nutrición para Mejorar el Empaque
    By Steve Bogash
    Rendimientos de tomates empaquables de mas dee 20 libras por planta son fácilmente alcanzables por los productores dispuestos a concentrarse en los detalles de producción.
  2. Bilingual Produce Safety Education
    Articles
    Bilingual Produce Safety Education
    By Maria Gorgo-Simcox
    Learn more about Produce Farm Food Safety for Produce Growers and Farmworkers in Pennsylvania with the following resources.
  3. Figure 1: Growers should examine the heat exchangers and heater boxes for cracks or pinholes prior to introducing crops into the production area. Photo by Thomas Ford, Penn State
    News
    Start-up Guidelines for Vegetable Greenhouses
    Date Posted 1/5/2023
    Most growers shut down their vegetable greenhouses in late November and will fire up their heaters again for the first time in late January.
  4. Sweet Corn Ears
    Articles
    Sweet Corn Production
    By Elsa Sánchez, Ph.D., Jayson K. Harper, Ph.D., Lynn Kime
    Initial investment is relatively low, and many field operations - such as land preparation, planting, and harvesting - can be custom-hired.
  5. Diversification of Your Operation, Why
    Articles
    Diversification of Your Operation, Why
    By Jeffrey Hyde, Ph.D., Lynn Kime, Jeffrey Hyde, Ph.D.
    By diversifying, you are spreading the downside risk over more than one enterprise.
  6. Two Designs for Low Cost "Hot Beds" for Small Scale Production
    Articles
    Two Designs for Low Cost "Hot Beds" for Small Scale Production
    By Tianna DuPont
    These two hot bed systems are a step up from growing under lights or in your kitchen window without all the costs of heating an entire greenhouse.
  7. Stake your Tomatoes
    Articles
    Stake your Tomatoes
    The Basket Weave or Florida Weave is a common way to stake field tomatoes. Staking is important to reduce fruit rots, sunscald and foliar diseases.
  8. Specialty peppers. Photo: M. D. Orzolek
    Articles
    Production and Marketing of Specialty or Novel Vegetables
    By Timothy Elkner, Lee Stivers, Michael Orzolek, Ph.D.
    Successfully growing and selling specialty crops requires time, effort, management, and marketing. Includes Bitter Melon, Figs, Ginger, Globe Artichoke, Novelty Winter Squash, Specialty Peppers, and Watercress.
  9. Rye Hairy Vetch. Photo: Elsa Sanchez
    Articles
    Growing Cover Crops for Nitrogen on Vegetable Farms
    By Elsa Sánchez, Ph.D., Charles White
    There are a lot of good reasons for using covers crops on vegetable farms including recycling or adding nitrogen to the soil.
  10. Photo: Tom Ford, Penn State
    News
    Science, Tomatoes, and How to Read a Table
    Date Posted 12/6/2022
    Numerous knowledge systems exist, including intuition, invention, personal experience, statistical data collection, storytelling, religious teachings, philosophical schools, and science.
  11. Irrigation for Fruit and Vegetable Production
    Articles
    Irrigation for Fruit and Vegetable Production
    By Jayson K. Harper, Ph.D., William Lamont, Jr., Ph.D.
    Irrigation often is necessary because of the uneven distribution of precipitation throughout the year, especially during critical growth periods.
  12. Garlic Producer
    Videos
    Garlic Producer
    By Jayson K. Harper, Ph.D., Thomas Ford, Michael Orzolek, Ph.D., Lynn Kime, Steve Bogash
    Length 4:04
    Garlic Producer Video
  13. Photo credit Mary Ann Frazier, Penn State Extension.
    Articles
    Who are Our Pollinators?
    By Christina Grozinger, Ph.D., Shelby Fleischer, Ph.D., Robyn Underwood, Ph.D., Margarita López-Uribe, Ph.D., Krishona Martinson
    Approximately three quarters of our major food crops are pollinated. Here we will look at how wild bees provide insurance against ongoing honey bee losses.
  14. Small Striped Bee (Halictus). Photo USGS Bee Inventory.
    Articles
    What Can We Do to Encourage Native Bees?
    By Christina Grozinger, Ph.D., Shelby Fleischer, Ph.D., Robyn Underwood, Ph.D., Margarita López-Uribe, Ph.D., Tianna DuPont
    Pollinators need a diverse, abundant food source and a place to build their nests and rear their young. If we keep these two elements in mind we can encourage native bee populations.
  15. Varroa mite parasitizing bee. Thought to be one of the major factors contributing to hive losses. Photo Alex Wild.
    Articles
    Pollinator Declines
    By Christina Grozinger, Ph.D., Shelby Fleischer, Ph.D., Robyn Underwood, Ph.D., Margarita López-Uribe, Ph.D., Tianna DuPont
    Domestic honey bees hives are down by 59% compared to 60 years ago with rapid declines over the last forty years. The populations of some native bee species may also be declining.
  16. Figure 1. This photo shows one of four sites where we are evaluating tomato cultivars based on yield. This year we studied eleven red early-season slicing cultivars. Photo: Elsa Sánchez, Penn State
    Articles
    Blossom End Rot, Internal Whitening, and Rain Check of Tomatoes
    By Elsa Sánchez, Ph.D., Tom Butzler, Robert Berghage, Ph.D.
    Cultivar selection can be daunting because numerous options are on the market, and new ones become available every year.
  17. Butternut squash in storage. Photo: Leah Fronk, Penn State
    Articles
    Prevent Rot of Winter Squash in Storage
    By Leah Fronk
    In August and September, everything is popping in the produce fields. One crop that is sizing up and one of the latest to mature is winter squash.
  18. On the Road: Sugar Valley Produce Auction
    Articles
    On the Road: Sugar Valley Produce Auction
    By Elsa Sánchez, Ph.D., Tom Butzler, William Lamont, Jr., Ph.D.
    We visited the Sugar Valley Produce Auction located just outside of Loganton, Pennsylvania.
  19. Tomates Cultivados en Contenedores
    Articles
    Tomates Cultivados en Contenedores
    By Tom Butzler, Maria Gorgo-Simcox, Thomas Maloney, Darryl Dressler
    El tomate es probablemente la hortaliza que mejor se adapta al cultivo en contenedor y que mayor fama tiene entre los productores con limitaciones de espacio, solo después de las especies de hierbas culinarias y medicinales.
  20. Si cultiva cucurbitáceas en un contenedor (izquierda) elija variedades de pepinos (centro) y calabazas (derecha) cultivadas para espacios pequeños y que tengan hábitos de crecimiento reducido.
    Articles
    Pepinos, Calabacines y Calabazas Cultivadas en Contenedores
    By Tom Butzler, Maria Gorgo-Simcox, Thomas Maloney, Darryl Dressler
    Este artículo, en combinación con los consejos incluidos en la publicación 'Recomendaciones generales para el cultivo de hortalizas en contenedores', le ayudará a cultivar hermosos pepinos, calabacines y calabazas.
  21. Recomendaciones Generales para el Cultivo de Hortalizas en Contenedores
    Articles
    Recomendaciones Generales para el Cultivo de Hortalizas en Contenedores
    By Tom Butzler, Maria Gorgo-Simcox, Thomas Maloney, Darryl Dressler
    Los principios básicos para obtener buenos resultados con el cultivo en contenedor son: dimensionar correctamente el tamaño de los contenedores para las especies a plantar, utilizar una buena mezcla de sustrato para el cultivo en maceta, fertilizar en caso necesario, optimizar el riego, y anticiparse a las plagas y enfermedades.
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