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There are still heaps of time left for a second harvest. Plant a second crop of lettuce, radishes, and spinach to harvest in the fall. Plus, here are cool-weather favorites that get better after a nip offrost.
Albert Camus said that autumn is a second spring because every leaf is a flower. For me, fall in the garden is a second spring because we are harvesting spring veggies again! There are many vegetables which can take advantage of that still-warm soil and thrive in cooler weather, especially those hardy heroes!
Why Plant a Garden forFall?
Every year, I try to convince my farmers’ market customers that they should be planting their fall gardens, but I don’t have many takers. Most give me the fish eye like I am trying to put something over on them. These are the folks that do a marathon planting session on Memorial Day weekend and then scratch “planting the garden” off their to do list—done for the year! They don’t realize that many crops can be put in the ground before that traditional planting day and others need to be planted later when they can mature in colder weather. A large part of our market day is spent educating people about thepossibilities.
ReadNext
Planting a Fall Vegetable Garden
Labor Day Gardening: What to Do in the Garden This Weekend
Understanding When to Plant Vegetables
- Planting fall cropslets you continue growing fresh, healthy food at home—plus, there is nothing like home-grown crisp, leafylettuce.
- The plants produce better and the work is spread out over severalweeks.
- Cooler temperatures means less watering and less sweating foryou!
- Warm soil is key to good germination, so by the time you’re planting in July and August, the soil will be warmed and your seedlings will grow likemad.
What Vegetables Can Be Planted for a FallHarvest?
Here in New Hampshire, I’m rather limited by our short growing season. However, if you live somewhere warmer, you can likely get away with planting a lot more for a fallharvest!
- After pulling our garlic in mid-summer, we had seedlings of lettuce, bok choy, chinese cabbage, and kale ready and waiting to plug into the emptybeds.
![Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (1) Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (1)](https://i0.wp.com/www.almanac.com/sites/default/files/users/Robin%20Sweetser/fall_greens_full_width.jpg)
- Spinach and Swiss chard can also be started from seed during summer,as both will last into colder fallweather.
- Ever the optimist, I planted more bush beans, summer squash, and cucumbers, knowing that I will have to cover them when cold weatherthreatens.
![Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (2) Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (2)](https://i0.wp.com/www.almanac.com/sites/default/files/users/Robin%20Sweetser/squash_004_full_width.jpg)
- If you live in a warmer part of the country, you may be able to plant another round of summer crops such as tomatoes and peppers.
Watch Ben plant his 6 must-grow fall crops!
What Makes For a Good FallCrop?
Generally, vegetables that mature quickly and that are frost tolerant make for the best fallcrops.
- Vegetables that can survive light frosts (in the30 to 32˚F range) includebeets, Chinese cabbage, cauliflower, celery, collards,green onions, potatoes, Bibb and leaf lettuce, mustard, parsnips, radishes, spinach, and Swiss chard. The flavor of some of these, such as collards and parsnips, is, in fact, much improved by exposure to a spell of below-freezingtemperature.
- Even hardier vegetables that can survive temperatures as low as 20˚F include cabbage, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, carrots, kale, leeks, rutabagas and turnips. Upon thawing out, these hardy vegetables will continue to grow betweenfreezes!
When to PlantWhat
It’s important toplantat the right time for your location. Here’s how to get a general idea of when toplant:
- See your local frost date calculator.
- Then take the days to maturity for the crop you plan to grow (usually listed on the seed packets) and count back this number of days from the frost date. (If the days to maturity listed is from transplant, not seeding, add another 4 weeks to thisfigure.)
- Because plants grow more slowly in the shorter, cooler days of fall, add a ″fall factor″ of another week or two to the maturitytime.
- Then add in the length of the expected harvest period and you’ve arrived at your planting date. Of course, you can plant earlier than this date, but to ensure a good crop, consider this to be the “last plantingdate.”
Generally speaking, here’s the rule ofthumb:
- 10-12 weeks before first frost:Broccoli,Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, carrots,celery.
- 8-10 weeks before first frost:Arugula, Chinese cabbage, collards, kale, lettuce, mustard greens, spinach, Swiss chart,turnips
- 6-8 weeks before first frost:Beets,radishes
If you plan to offer your plants protection (such as cold frames or row covers),you can plant 2 to 3 weeks later and still expect to get a goodharvest!
Fall Gardening CareTips
- Mulch your beets, carrots, turnips, and parsnips before the ground freezes hard. Even if the vegetable tops wilt, the roots will survive with mulching and you can often harvest through thewinter!
- With fast-maturing crops such as lettuce and hardy greens, stagger small plantings every few weeks to keep the harvest spread out or you’ll get all your lettuce at onetime.
- Of course, you’ll need to follow the gardening principles you’d use in the summer. Provide good soil (with organic matter), fertilize with plant food if you wish, and waterconsistently.
Watch Out for FallPests
Of course, it isn’t all as rosy as some of the gardening books would like you to think. You still need to keep an eye out for slugs, cutworms, and cabbage worms, which all like tender sprouts and leafygreens.
![Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (3) Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (3)](https://i0.wp.com/www.almanac.com/sites/default/files/users/Robin%20Sweetser/slug_full_width.jpg)
An unseen cabbage moth laid her eggs on my new kale plants in a hit-and-run fashion. (I thought it was too late in the season for that, but wrongagain!)
![Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (4) Best Vegetables to Plant for a Fall Garden (4)](https://i0.wp.com/www.almanac.com/sites/default/files/users/Robin%20Sweetser/cutworm_004_full_width.jpg)
Be sure to protect your young plants! One method is to make little plant collars out of aluminum foil or to cover the seedlings with cloches at night. Or just pickoff any pests you see and drop them in soapy water (check the undersides of leaves, too).See our advice on slugs, cabbage worms, andcutworms.
That said, there are definitelyfewer pests in the cool fall than in the summer, so that’s anotheradvantage!
Garden PlanningTool
Need more help planning a fall garden? Try the Almanac’s online Garden Planner, which lets you draw out beds right on your computer and select the right vegetables with the right spacing. The Garden Planner offers a 7-day trial (ample time to plan your firstgarden).
Good luck with your fall garden! What will you beplanting?