The heat of summer has just about brought an end to the cool season plants like broccoli, spinach, lettuce, peas, and radishes. They've bolted, they're bitter, and their flowers are turning to seed. Many gardeners see this point of the season as the end of their spring planting and allow those areas of the garden to descend into anarchy. I see it as the beginning of the fall planting and an opportunity to maintain order in the garden.
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Seed pods developing on a radish plant |
Midsummer is a perfect time to plant vegetables for a second harvest. As their moniker implies, cool season plants like cool weather conditions. It seems anachronistic to plant cool season plants in the heat of summer, but you need to look into the future. The seeds will germinate and begin growing under the summer sun but six weeks or two months later when the plants are approaching the point of harvest days and nights will be much cooler. The plants will be at their prime when weather conditions are perfect for them.
Some people suggest that a fall crop actually tastes better than a summer crop of cool season plants. There is valid reasoning behind this. Spring-sown plants are encountering stressful conditions at the point they are ready to harvest. The increasing sun and heat affects their growth and taste (see my article, "When Plants Bolt"). Summer-sown plants are able to direct all of their energy into growth and improved taste because the cooler autumn conditions don't trigger bolting and seed development.
To plant a second garden, for fall harvest, you can use the same plots for the same cool season plants. Your spinach still looks good, but it's past the point of usefulness in the kitchen. Pull it out, throw it in the compost pile, and sow new seeds. If you're letting some of the spinach flowers develop into seeds fully, as I am, sow in rows between the old, straggly plants. When you collect the seeds for next year you can pull out the old plants and add them to your pile. The new seedlings will have room to grow.
|
Spinach is bolting and turning bitter |
I'm still harvesting peas for a little while longer. Some of the plants are finished. I've sown new seeds in the bare spots of vacated plants and in the spaces between the plants still producing. I'll be harvesting a whole new crop of peas in September and probably well into October.
|
Peas are still producing but there's room for seeds |
You can rip out all of your old plants to sow a new planting in a fresh bed, but I think sowing between established plants helps the new seedlings. The hot sun can raise the soil temperature and can stress a young cool season seedling. The established plants act as protective guardians shading and lowering the soil temperature until the new plants can get established.
Either way, the soil needs to be kept moist while the seeds germinate and in summer that may mean extra watering. In spring you can get away with minimal irrigation as seeds develop, but in summer it requires extra effort to ensure the seeds don't dry out at a critical point or that the seedlings don't desiccate in the wind and sun. In return you won't have to water as much in fall because the plants' needs are reduced in the cooler conditions.
Knowing your first frost date is important so you have an idea of how long you have available for the plants to reach maturity and produce a crop. Allow enough time from summer sowing to fall harvest based on your local climate.
Many cool season plants can handle a light freeze so the first frost won't be as devastating for them as for warm season plants like tomatoes and peppers and beans and squash. Broccoli, cauliflower, cilantro, lettuce, peas, spinach, and chard can all shrug off a light frost. Some, like kale, Brussels sprouts, beets, cabbage, and collard greens can survive down to 20F degrees.
You can expect a steady and longer harvest of summer-sown plants. Radishes, carrots, and parsnips can even handle frozen soil. I'm told parsnips actually taste sweeter when allowed to endure freezes into January. That's my harvest plan for this plant new to my garden this year.
With season-extending structures, you can lengthen your fall harvest even more (see my article "Extending Your Growing Season with Mini Greenhouses"). Light frost and even killing freezes can be combated by covering your plants.
So don't despair that so much of your garden has stopped producing and is withering. Use the opportunity to continue gardening well into the cold months of the year. Plant in summer for a fall crop that may provide bounty into winter.
Link to "
Extending Your Growing Season with Mini Greenhouses."
The heat of summer has just about brought an end to the cool season plants like broccoli, spinach, lettuce, peas, and radishes. They've bolted, they're bitter, and their flowers are turning to seed. Many gardeners see this point of the season as the end of their spring planting and allow those areas of the garden to descend into anarchy. I see it as the beginning of the fall planting and an opportunity to maintain order in the garden.
|
Seed pods developing on a radish plant |
Midsummer is a perfect time to plant vegetables for a second harvest. As their moniker implies, cool season plants like cool weather conditions. It seems anachronistic to plant cool season plants in the heat of summer, but you need to look into the future. The seeds will germinate and begin growing under the summer sun but six weeks or two months later when the plants are approaching the point of harvest days and nights will be much cooler. The plants will be at their prime when weather conditions are perfect for them.
Some people suggest that a fall crop actually tastes better than a summer crop of cool season plants. There is valid reasoning behind this. Spring-sown plants are encountering stressful conditions at the point they are ready to harvest. The increasing sun and heat affects their growth and taste (see my article, "When Plants Bolt"). Summer-sown plants are able to direct all of their energy into growth and improved taste because the cooler autumn conditions don't trigger bolting and seed development.
To plant a second garden, for fall harvest, you can use the same plots for the same cool season plants. Your spinach still looks good, but it's past the point of usefulness in the kitchen. Pull it out, throw it in the compost pile, and sow new seeds. If you're letting some of the spinach flowers develop into seeds fully, as I am, sow in rows between the old, straggly plants. When you collect the seeds for next year you can pull out the old plants and add them to your pile. The new seedlings will have room to grow.
|
Spinach is bolting and turning bitter |
I'm still harvesting peas for a little while longer. Some of the plants are finished. I've sown new seeds in the bare spots of vacated plants and in the spaces between the plants still producing. I'll be harvesting a whole new crop of peas in September and probably well into October.
|
Peas are still producing but there's room for seeds |
You can rip out all of your old plants to sow a new planting in a fresh bed, but I think sowing between established plants helps the new seedlings. The hot sun can raise the soil temperature and can stress a young cool season seedling. The established plants act as protective guardians shading and lowering the soil temperature until the new plants can get established.
Either way, the soil needs to be kept moist while the seeds germinate and in summer that may mean extra watering. In spring you can get away with minimal irrigation as seeds develop, but in summer it requires extra effort to ensure the seeds don't dry out at a critical point or that the seedlings don't desiccate in the wind and sun. In return you won't have to water as much in fall because the plants' needs are reduced in the cooler conditions.
Knowing your first frost date is important so you have an idea of how long you have available for the plants to reach maturity and produce a crop. Allow enough time from summer sowing to fall harvest based on your local climate.
Many cool season plants can handle a light freeze so the first frost won't be as devastating for them as for warm season plants like tomatoes and peppers and beans and squash. Broccoli, cauliflower, cilantro, lettuce, peas, spinach, and chard can all shrug off a light frost. Some, like kale, Brussels sprouts, beets, cabbage, and collard greens can survive down to 20F degrees.
You can expect a steady and longer harvest of summer-sown plants. Radishes, carrots, and parsnips can even handle frozen soil. I'm told parsnips actually taste sweeter when allowed to endure freezes into January. That's my harvest plan for this plant new to my garden this year.
With season-extending structures, you can lengthen your fall harvest even more (see my article "Extending Your Growing Season with Mini Greenhouses"). Light frost and even killing freezes can be combated by covering your plants.
So don't despair that so much of your garden has stopped producing and is withering. Use the opportunity to continue gardening well into the cold months of the year. Plant in summer for a fall crop that may provide bounty into winter.
Link to "Extending Your Growing Season with Mini Greenhouses."
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