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A chill is in the air. The winds have blown the leaves off the trees, and the nights are getting short. Here in Minnesota, we are getting our first snowfall today! The garden season is over, and it is time to prepare for winter. In this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I am going to discuss how I will winterize the garden, tools and other gardening gear for winter.
Fall in Minnesota
We have been having a gorgeous fall here in Minnesota. The temperatures have been perfect, and the leaves on the trees have been fantastic. One comment on the leaves before we jump into the main topic: the progression of fall colors seems to have been sporadic this year. If there was a stand of trees, we would get one tree changing, and then another. It wasn’t like other years where they all changed at once. I would say that the peak colors in the Twin Cities happened around October 15th, and I took a lot of pictures of trees this fall. Julie and I will be traveling down the Mississippi River this weekend, so hopefully we will find some good views and fall color downstream!
First Snow in Minnesota
We are getting our first snow in Minnesota - 10/27/17
This podcast and corresponding post are essential a To Do Checklist for me (and perhaps for you as well) before we get an accumulation of white stuff and the ground freezes. Once the ground freezes, it is all over here in Minnesota. It really does turn into permafrost, and if you have any dead plants in the ground, they will be stuck there until the spring thaw. Trust me: it has happened to me before with my wicking beds.
As I look at the current state of my garden and garden area, I realize I have a lot to do before that happens! As of today, I have not pulled any of my plants. I had tomatoes and peppers on the plants last night. In fact, the basil is still sprouting new leaves and there are buds on the tomatoes and peppers, even though we got our first frost on October 10, which was exactly on the National Weather Service’s average frost date for this area.
So, let’s get down to what needs to be done, shall we?
7 Steps to Winterize Your Garden
You worked hard to grow those plants, so you should reap the rewards! Don’t let frost, snow and the deep freeze take that from you!
If any plants have signs of blight, remove plants and dispose of them. Do not throw them into your compost pile! If you throw infected plants into your compost pile, you could be infecting your compost with blight spores. Get rid of the plants with blight!
Unwrap and untie trellis string from the around the plants and conduit.
If it was earlier in the fall, I would recommend planting an over-winter crop such as garlic, onions or carrots. These plants can get a start growing in the warm soil and fading fall sun and will start growing during the spring thaw. As a gardener, there is something magical about seeing a green onion shoot or garlic shoot popping up in April after a long, hard winter. I am not planting any over-winter crops this year due to changes I am going to make next spring.
You will want to empty your rain barrel! Water expands by about 9% when it freezes, and that is why containers that have a lid and water in them break when frozen. At the same time, water weighs about 8.3 pounds per gallon, so our full 40 gallon water barrel will weight over 330 pounds! Yeah, you want to empty that rain barrel out before moving it.
With blight infected some of my tomato plants, I want to clean and sterilize my tools and containers. I don’t want next year’s plants to come in contact with any blight! I will use Lysol or a solution of 90% water to 10% bleach. It is important to dry metal tools after cleaning, so they do not corrode.
I will be organizing and storing the various bins, containers, soil, buckets and other odds and ends I have acquired as part of my gardening efforts. After the move, I stored them along the house near the garden bench, but I have to admit that the stack of materials does not look great. I also will be shoveling the walkway, and those materials are going to be in my way. I need to move those materials into the garage and store them there. Of course, that will kick off a garage organization and storage project as well!
We will be covering our wood patio furniture (swing and Adirondack chairs with tarps). Weather (sun, rain, snow and ice) are hard on wood furniture, and we have found this helps preserve these wood pieces. Julie has talked about spray painting the chairs before the snow hits; we’ll see if that happens.
We will be draining all lawn equipment in the near future. It isn’t good for the lawn mower, blower or weed whip to leave old gas in them. I usually run the equipment until they run out of gas. Using old gas and an old spark plug are typically the reasons why your lawn equipment won’t start in the spring.
These are pretty quick projects, and you can get them done in a day or so. Take the time; it is worth getting organized and ready for winter. You will find that being organized and having clean tools and containers will lead to a strong start this winter when you start seedlings and gear up for the new year! After all, we will be starting tomato and pepper plants in February, which is right around the corner. Do the work now, and set yourself up for success.
Next Steps and Your Turn
The final harvest of 2017!
If you have any comments on the show, feel free to leave them on the contact us page or as a comment under this blog post. Reach out. Engage. Become part of the community in the Small Scale Life Facebook Group.
Thank you again for tuning in and reading this article on Small Scale Life. Remember to grow, explore and be healthy! This is Tom from the Small Scale Life Podcast, and we’ll see you really soon!
By Tom4.9
2727 ratings
A chill is in the air. The winds have blown the leaves off the trees, and the nights are getting short. Here in Minnesota, we are getting our first snowfall today! The garden season is over, and it is time to prepare for winter. In this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I am going to discuss how I will winterize the garden, tools and other gardening gear for winter.
Fall in Minnesota
We have been having a gorgeous fall here in Minnesota. The temperatures have been perfect, and the leaves on the trees have been fantastic. One comment on the leaves before we jump into the main topic: the progression of fall colors seems to have been sporadic this year. If there was a stand of trees, we would get one tree changing, and then another. It wasn’t like other years where they all changed at once. I would say that the peak colors in the Twin Cities happened around October 15th, and I took a lot of pictures of trees this fall. Julie and I will be traveling down the Mississippi River this weekend, so hopefully we will find some good views and fall color downstream!
First Snow in Minnesota
We are getting our first snow in Minnesota - 10/27/17
This podcast and corresponding post are essential a To Do Checklist for me (and perhaps for you as well) before we get an accumulation of white stuff and the ground freezes. Once the ground freezes, it is all over here in Minnesota. It really does turn into permafrost, and if you have any dead plants in the ground, they will be stuck there until the spring thaw. Trust me: it has happened to me before with my wicking beds.
As I look at the current state of my garden and garden area, I realize I have a lot to do before that happens! As of today, I have not pulled any of my plants. I had tomatoes and peppers on the plants last night. In fact, the basil is still sprouting new leaves and there are buds on the tomatoes and peppers, even though we got our first frost on October 10, which was exactly on the National Weather Service’s average frost date for this area.
So, let’s get down to what needs to be done, shall we?
7 Steps to Winterize Your Garden
You worked hard to grow those plants, so you should reap the rewards! Don’t let frost, snow and the deep freeze take that from you!
If any plants have signs of blight, remove plants and dispose of them. Do not throw them into your compost pile! If you throw infected plants into your compost pile, you could be infecting your compost with blight spores. Get rid of the plants with blight!
Unwrap and untie trellis string from the around the plants and conduit.
If it was earlier in the fall, I would recommend planting an over-winter crop such as garlic, onions or carrots. These plants can get a start growing in the warm soil and fading fall sun and will start growing during the spring thaw. As a gardener, there is something magical about seeing a green onion shoot or garlic shoot popping up in April after a long, hard winter. I am not planting any over-winter crops this year due to changes I am going to make next spring.
You will want to empty your rain barrel! Water expands by about 9% when it freezes, and that is why containers that have a lid and water in them break when frozen. At the same time, water weighs about 8.3 pounds per gallon, so our full 40 gallon water barrel will weight over 330 pounds! Yeah, you want to empty that rain barrel out before moving it.
With blight infected some of my tomato plants, I want to clean and sterilize my tools and containers. I don’t want next year’s plants to come in contact with any blight! I will use Lysol or a solution of 90% water to 10% bleach. It is important to dry metal tools after cleaning, so they do not corrode.
I will be organizing and storing the various bins, containers, soil, buckets and other odds and ends I have acquired as part of my gardening efforts. After the move, I stored them along the house near the garden bench, but I have to admit that the stack of materials does not look great. I also will be shoveling the walkway, and those materials are going to be in my way. I need to move those materials into the garage and store them there. Of course, that will kick off a garage organization and storage project as well!
We will be covering our wood patio furniture (swing and Adirondack chairs with tarps). Weather (sun, rain, snow and ice) are hard on wood furniture, and we have found this helps preserve these wood pieces. Julie has talked about spray painting the chairs before the snow hits; we’ll see if that happens.
We will be draining all lawn equipment in the near future. It isn’t good for the lawn mower, blower or weed whip to leave old gas in them. I usually run the equipment until they run out of gas. Using old gas and an old spark plug are typically the reasons why your lawn equipment won’t start in the spring.
These are pretty quick projects, and you can get them done in a day or so. Take the time; it is worth getting organized and ready for winter. You will find that being organized and having clean tools and containers will lead to a strong start this winter when you start seedlings and gear up for the new year! After all, we will be starting tomato and pepper plants in February, which is right around the corner. Do the work now, and set yourself up for success.
Next Steps and Your Turn
The final harvest of 2017!
If you have any comments on the show, feel free to leave them on the contact us page or as a comment under this blog post. Reach out. Engage. Become part of the community in the Small Scale Life Facebook Group.
Thank you again for tuning in and reading this article on Small Scale Life. Remember to grow, explore and be healthy! This is Tom from the Small Scale Life Podcast, and we’ll see you really soon!