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Depending on where you garden you may have just had your first frost or even a hard freeze. If you are one of my warm-climate gardeners, you’re steadily marching toward the time of year when plants begin to go dormant or, if you don’t have a Persephone Period, the time of year when growth slows dramatically. Now is the time to take advantage of that period of time to either put the garden to bed for the winter or to get it ready for spring, or both!
Today we’re talking about what to do to get your garden ready for winter slumber, even if you’re overwintering plants in those beds, and how doing these activities now will absolute get you to a better start in the spring. It took me many years to realize just how much better my season starts in spring if I do some of the prep work now. My mental state and my garden soil both thank me for it.
We’re also chatting about the question or comment that I’ve gotten the most this fall from gardeners at the market stand and, of course, since this is Missouri, it obviously has to do with growing tomatoes…or maybe not growing tomatoes. I’ll weigh on why this year was such a horrible year for growing tomatoes here and what you can do in your own garden to give yourself a better chance at harvesting your most loved fruit or veggie. Let’s dig in!
Get a Free Bloom Juice from Elm Dirt: Use Code JustGrow
Black Rifle Coffee Club!
Just Grow Something Gardening Friends Facebook Group
Check out how you can become a patron on Patreon
Follow me on Instagram
JustGrowSomethingPodcast.com
Merchandise | Just Grow Something
Positively Farming Media Podcast Playlist on Spotify
Resources:
Vegetable Planting Calendar | MU Extension (missouri.edu)
5
5454 ratings
Depending on where you garden you may have just had your first frost or even a hard freeze. If you are one of my warm-climate gardeners, you’re steadily marching toward the time of year when plants begin to go dormant or, if you don’t have a Persephone Period, the time of year when growth slows dramatically. Now is the time to take advantage of that period of time to either put the garden to bed for the winter or to get it ready for spring, or both!
Today we’re talking about what to do to get your garden ready for winter slumber, even if you’re overwintering plants in those beds, and how doing these activities now will absolute get you to a better start in the spring. It took me many years to realize just how much better my season starts in spring if I do some of the prep work now. My mental state and my garden soil both thank me for it.
We’re also chatting about the question or comment that I’ve gotten the most this fall from gardeners at the market stand and, of course, since this is Missouri, it obviously has to do with growing tomatoes…or maybe not growing tomatoes. I’ll weigh on why this year was such a horrible year for growing tomatoes here and what you can do in your own garden to give yourself a better chance at harvesting your most loved fruit or veggie. Let’s dig in!
Get a Free Bloom Juice from Elm Dirt: Use Code JustGrow
Black Rifle Coffee Club!
Just Grow Something Gardening Friends Facebook Group
Check out how you can become a patron on Patreon
Follow me on Instagram
JustGrowSomethingPodcast.com
Merchandise | Just Grow Something
Positively Farming Media Podcast Playlist on Spotify
Resources:
Vegetable Planting Calendar | MU Extension (missouri.edu)
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