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Many people view fall as a time of year that symbolizes the end of the gardening season – and to some extent that is true – but it’s also the beginning of next season in many regards, and can also be a time of great activity for a gardener. Here’s a list of things to consider as we move into the colder months.
Building New Beds
Amending Soils
Garlic
Plant your garlic around mid-October. If you want to grow your own garlic, you need to plant it in the fall. Once you’ve tried it, you will only want more each year. Get them in the ground, about 4″ deep, and walk away.
Tomatoes, Beans, Peppers and Summer Squashes
If you have heat loving plants in your garden, their days are numbered. Start thinking of ways to use them up or preserve them now (chow/salsa/pickles/etc.), and be sure to get them out of there before the frost hits.
Carrots and Parsnips
Potatoes
Strawberries
Biennial Greens
Many greens at their best when they are exposed to fall frosts, so keep picking until they are gone. If you have a couple that did really well, leave them alone, mark them somehow, and leave them in the ground all winter. Next spring they will come back and produce seeds for you.
Tools
Finally, when it’s all over, and you’ve done everything you can think of: clean up your tools with a wire bush and/or sandpaper; sharpen what needs sharpening; oil all the wood and metal, then put everything away so you are all ready for next year.
Final Thoughts
We tend to see the fall as a time to shut down, but in many regards it’s time to gear up and get the next season started. Use this time well, and then take a nice break from it all in the winter months. Next spring, all you will have to think about planting seeds, and nurturing them to health.
By MaritimeGardening.comMany people view fall as a time of year that symbolizes the end of the gardening season – and to some extent that is true – but it’s also the beginning of next season in many regards, and can also be a time of great activity for a gardener. Here’s a list of things to consider as we move into the colder months.
Building New Beds
Amending Soils
Garlic
Plant your garlic around mid-October. If you want to grow your own garlic, you need to plant it in the fall. Once you’ve tried it, you will only want more each year. Get them in the ground, about 4″ deep, and walk away.
Tomatoes, Beans, Peppers and Summer Squashes
If you have heat loving plants in your garden, their days are numbered. Start thinking of ways to use them up or preserve them now (chow/salsa/pickles/etc.), and be sure to get them out of there before the frost hits.
Carrots and Parsnips
Potatoes
Strawberries
Biennial Greens
Many greens at their best when they are exposed to fall frosts, so keep picking until they are gone. If you have a couple that did really well, leave them alone, mark them somehow, and leave them in the ground all winter. Next spring they will come back and produce seeds for you.
Tools
Finally, when it’s all over, and you’ve done everything you can think of: clean up your tools with a wire bush and/or sandpaper; sharpen what needs sharpening; oil all the wood and metal, then put everything away so you are all ready for next year.
Final Thoughts
We tend to see the fall as a time to shut down, but in many regards it’s time to gear up and get the next season started. Use this time well, and then take a nice break from it all in the winter months. Next spring, all you will have to think about planting seeds, and nurturing them to health.