Don't over look having a couple of apple trees. The dry heat prevents a lot of disease problems that other areas have.
Okra is another good garden heat plant.
I have a garden, apple trees, peach trees plum trees, cherry trees, pecan trees, citrus trees and even bananas. Keeps me very busy.
Don't have any room for trees, but many do well here that would be unexpected like peaches.
Maybe the broccoli will have to go wayside for okra. I do have some carrots that can't be seen in the pics in here too.
Cattb:
"many things could be wrong
PH
amount of nutruients in soil (example; to much nitrogen in the soil with some plants can keep them in a vegetive state)
soil...does the soil need amending?
time of planting? "
I planted most of these in early March, but the broccoli sprung until during the winter tilling on its' own - must have been seeds that didn't sprout from seasons ago.
Geezer:
"Go with
peppers, New Mexico and Big Jim's are best for your area....but you will have to go with plants at this rate--a tad late for seeds. If you need seeds for next year let me know."
Thanks, but peppers don't agree much with my palate - dunno burpy...
NatCigg:
"Most likely your pH will match your
irrigation water"
This I'll have to test when I get a kit and we have irrigation (every 2 weeks,) will be interesting to see.
Ammo:
"I can grow
jalepeno and habenero peppers without an issue."
Yeah, I would of imagined they wouldn't grow in colder climate.
Dubious:
"this type of soil is susceptible to erosion/runoff, having straw worked into the soil with compost will help retain moisture without saturating the soil and provide additional nutrients to the plant."
I've got the garden lined with pavers so I don't loose much soil, but it also prevents a lot of the irrigation from getting in.
I'll report back after a pH test is done, until then happy gardening.