How to Grow Southern Peas

General Information
Scientific Name: Vigna unguiculata
Common Names: Southern peas, cow peas, black-eyed peas, purple hull peas, cream peas, crowder peas
Plant Family: Fabaceae
Vegetable Type: Warm season legume
Popular Varieties: Black-eyed peas, purple hull pinkeye peas, cream peas, crowder peas
Know Before You Grow
Growing Zones: 7 to 11
Crops per Year: 1 crop per year, but if you have a really long season, you may get 2 crops with successive plantings.
Plants Per Person: 10 to 15 feet of row per person. If preserving, make that 20 to 30 feet of row per person.
Frost Hardy: No
Heat Tolerant: Yes. This is one of southern peas selling points…other than their awesome flavor.
Stratification: No
Scarification: No
Resistances: Their only real resistance is to heat.
Rotation Schedule
Schedule: 3 year rotation
Follow ->: Corn, brassicas, onions, garlic, root crops, leafy greens
<-Following: corn, brassicas, leafy greens, cucurbits
Starting from Seed
When: Direct sow Southern peas.
Garden Bed Prep
Soil: Loose, well-draining soil
pH: 5.8 to 6.8
Soil Depth: 8 to 10 inches
Trellis: Not for bush varieties, which most southern peas are.
Fertilizer: Southern peas are light to moderate feeders. Work 1 to 2 inches of compost into the soil, and if the soil is poor, apply a light balanced fertilizer. Do NOT heavily fertilize with high-nitrogen fertilizer.
Transplanting
When: Direct sown
Direct Sowing
When: After all danger of frost has passed and the soil is truly warm.
Depth: 1 to 1 1/2 inches
Spacing: 3 to 4 inches apart. Rows 24 to 36 inches apart.
Water: Keep soil evenly moist until germination and establishment. Avoid making the soil soggy.
Light: Full sun
Soil Temperature: 70° to 95°F
# in Sq. Ft. Planting: 9 per square foot
Germination: 5 to 10 days
Growing Care
Soil pH: 5.8 to 6.8
Fertilizer/Feed: None beyond bed prep
Days to Maturity: 60 to 90 days
Water: Do not get the soil soggy, but do not let it get dry either. Once established, southern peas can handle dry conditions better than most beans or peas, but they produce better if the soil has steady moisture.
Pruning: Just remove anything that is dead, diseased or damaged.
Mulching: 1 to 2 inches, then more later if needed to keep moisture in and weeds out.
Pollination: Self-pollinating
Companions & Antagonists
Plant Family: Antagonists:
corn onions
cucumbers garlic
melons leeks
radishes and carrots –
Attracts & Repels
Attracts: Repels:
bees and other flower visitors Nothing
Pests & Disease
Pests: Disease:
aphids Powdery mildew
stink bugs root rot
cowpea curculio fusarium wilt
leafhoppers mosaic viruses
spider mites damping off
cutworms –
Seed Saving
When: When mature and dry on the vine.
Method: Pick and shell the dried pea pods before rain damages them. Dry thoroughly if needed.
Storage: store in a cool, dry place
Harvest Time
When: Shelling Peas: Harvest when pods are full and peas are developed, but still tender.
Dry Peas: Leave on the plant until they dry down well.
For Snaps: This doesn’t really apply, since southern peas are almost always grown for shelling.
How: Pick or snip the pea from the vine.
Storing: Southern peas need to be cooked or preserved within a few days of being harvested.
Preservation Methods: Canning, freezing, drying
Troubleshooting
Lots of vine and leaves, not many pods: Usually too much nitrogen or too much shade.
Flowers but poor pod set: Could be heat stress, drought stress during flowering or general plant stress.
Seeds rot in the ground: Usually soil was too cold or too wet
Plants are stunted: Could be poor soil, root problems, crowding, or planting too early into cool ground.
Leaves Yellowing: Could be poor drainage, root trouble, nutrient imbalance or disease
Pods sparse or poorly filled: Could be drought stress, low vigor or variety timing
Plants look fine but produce weakly: Could be overfeeding with nitrogen, not enough sun or poor growing conditions early on.
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