2
Winter Vegetable Gardening -- Harvest Year Round Let's say which winter is approaching and you're sad at the prospect of zero fresh vegetables on the table. You shouldn't be sad - end up being happy that you have an opportunity to be a vegetable gardener all year long. With the straightforward addition of clear coverings, you can coax any number of vegetables straight into providing you with a nice harvesting well into the winter months. With a little planning, your season of growing vegetables doesn't have to end together with shorter and cooler days of winter. My experience in November inside Wyoming, with conditions in the teens as well as twenties, shows balanced and vigorous turnips, lettuce, bok choi and Swiss chard in a single layer green house. The greenhouse just isn't heated either. How in the world can you do this without heat? it isn't difficult, just select chilly hardy plants that will enjoy cool and cold weather. There are about something like 20 varieties that I may think of, including: kale broccoli Brussels sprouts turnips cabbage snow peas lettuce Swiss chard collards carrots radishes And, the list goes on and on. A number of seed companies offer fall and winter months seed catalogs, and that means you won't have to search far for suggestions. The trick would be to watch how you h2o, double cover the plants, and harvest when temperatures are very well above freezing. That needs to be easy enough. Let's look at just how these factors receive play with a wintertime vegetable garden. Water - excess normal water gets into plant tissues and then kills these when it gets frozen. Water lightly or otherwise at all during the winter time. Evaporation will be reduced anyway, so planning weeks or several weeks without water is not going to hurt your plant life. Coverings - the secret with covers is to apply them to retain organic heat from the land and capture heat from the sun. Think of them as a greenhouse within a greenhouse. Whether you have a techniques or a high canal or a hoop home, using a row cover inside of that framework will make a big difference within changing what the plant life "see" in terms of period. Harvest during the day - to make certain that conditions are up over freezing and the crops have a chance to endure the cold night time. If you don't, you'll have mush on your hands.

Winter Vegetable Gardening -- Harvest Year Round

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Winter Vegetable Gardening -- Harvest Year Round

Winter Vegetable Gardening -- Harvest Year Round

Let's say which winter is approaching and you're sad at the prospect of zero fresh vegetables on the

table. You shouldn't be sad - end up being happy that you have an opportunity to be a vegetable

gardener all year long.

With the straightforward addition of clear coverings, you can coax any number of vegetables straight

into providing you with a nice harvesting well into the winter months. With a little planning, your

season of growing vegetables doesn't have to end together with shorter and cooler days of winter.

My experience in November inside Wyoming, with conditions in the teens as well as twenties, shows

balanced and vigorous turnips, lettuce, bok choi and Swiss chard in a single layer green house. The

greenhouse just isn't heated either.

How in the world can you do this without heat? it isn't difficult, just select chilly hardy plants that will

enjoy cool and cold weather. There are about something like 20 varieties that I may think of,

including:

kale

broccoli

Brussels sprouts

turnips

cabbage

snow peas

lettuce

Swiss chard

collards

carrots

radishes

And, the list goes on and on. A number of seed companies offer fall and winter months seed catalogs,

and that means you won't have to search far for suggestions.

The trick would be to watch how you h2o, double cover the plants, and harvest when temperatures

are very well above freezing. That needs to be easy enough. Let's look at just how these factors

receive play with a wintertime vegetable garden.

Water - excess normal water gets into plant tissues and then kills these when it gets frozen. Water

lightly or otherwise at all during the winter time. Evaporation will be reduced anyway, so planning

weeks or several weeks without water is not going to hurt your plant life.

Coverings - the secret with covers is to apply them to retain organic heat from the land and capture

heat from the sun. Think of them as a greenhouse within a greenhouse. Whether you have a

techniques or a high canal or a hoop home, using a row cover inside of that framework will make a

big difference within changing what the plant life "see" in terms of period.

Harvest during the day - to make certain that conditions are up over freezing and the crops have a

chance to endure the cold night time. If you don't, you'll have mush on your hands.

Page 2: Winter Vegetable Gardening -- Harvest Year Round

My planting season vegetable gardening experience shows that lettuce can go into 9 degrees y with a

simple protecting within the greenhouse. In the event that lettuce can do the idea, then there are so

many other cold hardy vegetation that can easily take action. Kale is perhaps just about the most cold

hardy vegetation, so it is on the top of my cold weather vegetable gardening list.

Be daring, be adventurous, and surrender at the first sign of fall. Get yourself a simple composition

and row handles to extend your harvest well into the cold months of winter. Fresh vegetables are

meant to be enjoyed all year long - from your garden. Deck box