2024 Fall Home & Garden
Magazine

Autumn Vegetable Gardening: Summer’s End Does Not Mean the End of Homegrown Vegetables!

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[September 26, 2024]   Shorter days and cooler weather may make it seem like vegetable gardening is coming to an end for the year, however, there are many ways to extend the growing season and take your veggie garden into the fall and even into winter. Fall is an enjoyable and rewarding time to be out in the garden with cooler weather, fewer insects, and fewer plant diseases to contend with.

Grow Cool Weather Crops

Think spring when thinking about an autumn garden because many of our spring favorites can be grown in the cooler weather of fall, as well! Carrots, lettuce, spinach, beets, radishes, kale, chard, garlic, cabbage, turnips, bok choy, arugula, mustard greens… the list is vast! Any vegetable you notice showing up at the farmer’s market in the springtime, disappearing during the heat of summer, and reappearing in early fall is probably a cool season crop and one that you could try growing in your own fall garden.

Some vegetables not only do not mind the cooler weather, they taste better because of it! Brussels sprouts, for example, have a long growing season, but the frosts in the fall are what sweeten the flavor. Many additional vegetables in the brassica family also taste better after a frost, such as kale and broccoli. The cooler weather causes plants to use sugars to avoid freezing, which gives us that sweeter flavor!

Leafy Greens

Leafy greens can be directly sown into the soil for a fall harvest. Plant the seed twice as deep as recommended on the packaging to aid germination in the cooler weather. For lettuce and spinach, grow different varieties of each in both spring and fall to encourage more successful germination. Add kale and chard to the fall (and spring) garden repertoire as both are extremely nutritious and very easy to grow. It is a matter of sowing the seeds into soil and keeping them evenly moist. Herbs like parsley and cilantro are also ideal for cooler weather as they tend to flower and form seeds in the warmer months.

Root Vegetables

Root vegetables such as carrots, beets, radishes, and turnips are perfect for an autumn garden as they have a relatively short growing season and will not mind a little frost. Plant these in late August or early September for a fall harvest. Cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower can be planted as transplants from a garden center or started at home. Vegetables in the brassica family are often compromised by the cabbage moth caterpillars, which will be less of a problem in the cool weather. Well-established kale and chard from summer may even be able to overwinter with covering and be some of the first vegetables to renew and produce in the spring.

Garlic

When planting flower bulbs for spring, why not add some garlic bulbs as well? Healthy to eat and simple to grow, garlic comes in soft neck, hard neck, and elephant varieties. Soft neck has the longest storage life of up to a full year when stored properly, and the soft necks allow for it to be braided together and hung up for storage. Soft neck garlic has a milder flavor than the spicier hard neck variety. Hard neck garlic survives better in colder climates such as central Illinois and grows delicious scapes in the spring. Garlic scapes are a tasty delicacy and should be trimmed off in the spring so that the growing energy is directed toward bulb formation. Elephant garlic is actually more closely related to leeks but grows as a large bulb. Elephant garlic has a mild flavor and prefers warmer climates. Plant individual garlic cloves in fall after the soil has cooled, but before the ground has frozen– mid-September to mid-October in central Illinois– and provide a layer of mulch. There is no need to water over the winter months. Water and fertilize in the spring when the green shoots appear.

Extend Warm Weather Crops

All the options available for getting a jump start on gardening in the spring when the temperatures are still cool are options again as fall approaches to extend the season. Using cold frames, cloches, low tunnels, row covers, and greenhouses are all possibilities for extending the growing season for vegetables that prefer the warmer temperatures.

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A cold frame can be relatively easy and inexpensive to construct as it is basically a box without a bottom with a transparent covering on top. Made of one to two-inch thick wood, or other available materials such as brick or straw bales, the box structure can be covered with plastic such as greenhouse film or clear panels such as old windows. Angle the transparent cover toward the southern sky and vent by propping the cover open on warm, sunny days.

A cloche is a bottle or jug with the bottom removed that can be placed over individual plants. It can protect against frost but is unlikely to protect against a hard freeze. Remove the bottle’s cap to provide ventilation on warmer days.

Low tunnels (as opposed to high tunnels, which are large enough to walk through and not as likely of an option for a home garden) can be constructed of PVC, wire, or metal that can be bent into a half circle. This half circle, called a hoop, will be covered with fabric row cover or greenhouse polyethylene (note that polyethylene degrades in contact with PVC). These not only prevent frost damage, but may be used throughout the growing season to prevent insect damage for plants that do not need pollination and prior to flowering for plants that do need pollination.

Sometimes even the simplest solution can be effective. Warm season crops such as tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant can be covered with plastic sheeting, floating row cover, and even old sheets when the temperatures get frosty at night. The idea is to create a barrier that keeps the frost off the leaves of the plant, but nothing so heavy that the barrier crushes the plant. The warm weather vegetable plants may not grow new fruits with the shorter days, but existing fruits will have longer to ripen on the vine or plant when protected from frosty temperatures. Uncover during the day if temperatures are warm enough and recover if nighttime low temperatures hover around freezing to buy yourself several more weeks of the season.

Autumn can be both a time to enjoy the harvest and a time to continue growing. With the right plants and a little extra care, home gardeners can enjoy fresh produce from their gardens in almost every season!

[Stephanie Hall]

Sources

https://extension.illinois.edu/blogs/
good-growing/2020-04-07-starting-
garden-season-extension

https://www.rareseeds.com/blog/post/
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Read all the articles in our new
2024 Fall Home & Garden Magazine

Title
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Page
Is fall your favorite time of year? 4
Outdoor Plants and Winter Windowsills 6
Autumn Vegetable Gardening:  Summer's End Does Not Mean the End of Homegrown Vegetables! 12
Soup & Bread; Winter Comfort Food 16
Don't Fumble Your Football party 18
Welcome the Fall Holidays With Early Prep and Good Planning 22
Looking to Buy a House? 26
So, You Think You Want to be a Snowbird? 30

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