Getting Ready for Cool Weather Plantings - Save 15%
August 2008 
Harvest Salad Greens
Bountiful Harvests
Harvest Fresh Salad Greens
Cool  Season  Bountiful Harvest with 2B Seeds Vegetables Seeds
 

Late summer and fall is a great time for gardening. Cooler weather, reduced pest pressure and staggered plantings make for a relaxing experience in the garden. And of course, nothing beats garden-fresh, nutrition-packed food in late fall and winter. By choosing the right crops and planting times, and employing a few simple season-extending techniques, your garden can flourish long after the last tomatoes are canned. Many fall-sown crops can also winter-over to provide early spring food and, along with fall-transplanted perennials, host pollinator and other beneficial insects as they flower in early summer. Fall cover cropping is great way to protect and build your soil, as well as beat spring weeds and add to the ecological diversity of your garden. So while you are enjoying the beauty and bounty of summer, "plant ahead" for a continuous and fruitful harvest.
Gardening for many of us is a seasonal affair. In the depths of winter, we dream of the first hint of green. We excitedly pour over garden catalogs, place our orders and anxiously wait for our seeds to arrive. Spring is a flurry of activity involving soil preparation, repairing cold frames, building compost piles, fixing up the watering system and planting, planting and more planting. By early June much of this focused activity comes to a grinding halt. We figure everything is planted and other than some maintenance and weeding, we sit back and anticipate harvest.

 
Harvest Fresh Salad Greens and Other Veggies Right Through Fall  !
 

As we become more experienced gardeners we soon realize that we need not restrict our gardening passion to a few brief months. With timely and successive plantings throughout the summer and early fall, we can more fully enjoy our gardens and the fresh vegetables they provide almost year-round. A successful harvest from these later plantings depends largely upon our knowledge of the particular crop and variety being grown. You'll find in this article a series of tips designed to help you maximize your harvest and enjoy your garden year round.
For example, lettuce is a cool-weather crop that tolerates light frosts as well as summer heat. Therefore, it can be successively sown every two or three weeks from early spring to late summer in order to assure a continual harvest up to several weeks after your first frost in the fall. Your latest summer plantings should occur about 6-8 weeks after early spring until late summer. In moderate climates like the Pacific Northwest, lettuce varieties can even survive throughout the winter and can be planted as late as September. Varieties planted in late spring until mid-summer must be more resistant to heat and slower to bolt (go to seed)
Carrots also lend themselves to successive plantings throughout the spring and summer and a great feature of late plantings is that they tend to be much sweeter than summer harvested roots due to their exposure to light frosts. However, in warmer regions such as South California, Arizona, Texas and Florida, these rules of thumb do not apply. In these locales fall plantings are not only appropriate but may be the only planting time for good carrot growth. Carrots can grow in cool fall conditions but their growth slows down considerably as the days become progressively shorter. Thus, in most regions of the United States, 10-12 weeks before your first fall frost is the latest that carrots should be planted.
Many of the leafy green vegetables, such as spinach, and arugula have two "windows of opportunity". These crops not only prefer cooler weather, but do rather poorly when it becomes hot and tend to bolt quickly. Thus they can be planted in early spring for late spring/early summer harvest, or they can be planted in mid to late summer (6 to 8 weeks before your first fall frost) for a fall harvest. In milder climates, these crops can continue growing and providing during the winter months. Even in climates with severe winters, spinach can be sown in the fall. After it emerges from the soil, liberally mulch it with straw. It will remain dormant during the winter and resume growth during the first warm days of early spring.
Peas are another crop that can be planted in either early spring or late summer, but the spring planting usually results in a better harvest.
Broccoli, cabbage also have two optimum planting times (i.e. early spring and mid-summer), but these crops should generally be transplanted rather than direct seeded. Plant your seeds 12 to 14 weeks before your first fall frost and then transplant your seedlings into the garden 6 to 8 weeks before your first fall frost. In milder climates these crops can even survive through the winter.  Radishes such as our Champion and Cherry Belle are quick growing and can be planted throughout the spring until 2 to 4 weeks before the first fall frost. You can enjoy food from your garden for many more weeks of the year than is usually recognized. Have a great fall gardening season with all of our vegetables!
 
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