November 21, 2024

VIDEO: Fall Vegetable Garden Planning – Choosing the Best Plants for Autumn Growing


💛 📖 See the GrowVeg book here: https://www.growveg.com/growveg-the-beginners-guide-to-easy-gardening.aspx.
Planting a fall vegetable garden is a great way to get more crops from the space you have right through autumn into early winter but timing is key to its success.

In this video, we demonstrate how you can select plants for your fall garden by choosing vegetables which like to be planted at this time of year, as well as how you can use the Garden Planner to work out the best position to help each plant grow to its full potential.

The Garden Planner is available from several major websites and seed suppliers:
http://www.GrowVeg.com
http://gardenplanner.motherearthnews.com
http://gardenplanner.almanac.com
and many more…

27 thoughts on “VIDEO: Fall Vegetable Garden Planning – Choosing the Best Plants for Autumn Growing

  1. The Garden Planner is available from several gardening websites – just click the Show More link under the description of the video (above) and you'll see a list of links to some of the sites (sorry, YouTube won't let us post links directly into this comment). GrowVeg.com is one of the main ones.

  2. This informational video is extremely great! This is very helpful to be wise in selecting what to type of plant to have in particularly in every season. Of course, we need succeed in what we aimed for about gardening.

  3. Altho Peas them selves as in the plant is frost resistant and can grow after many frosts the Peas and flowers are Not frost tolerant… so you will be wasting your time growing them as a fall crop anywhere that has frost… but they make a great early spring crop as soon as soil can be worked! just hoping not to many people waste there time trying to grow fall peas in frost affected areas

  4. Hi, newbie here ๐Ÿ™‚ As a "transplant" to S France myself, I'm having some confusion about what to do when (starting from seed, planting and especially taking cuttings etc ) when there is no frost date. Any help much appreciated….apparantly, we are similar to zone 9b in the US.

  5. will this work on a covered patio facing west? also would I need to start the seedlings inside with grow light and then any grow lights required on the porch? Location Dallas Tx. Thanks

  6. Sow warm soil: peas, beets, collards, kale, leeks, radishes
    Start cool and transplant: pak choy, endive, radichio, lettuce, parsley, spinach,
    Sow cool soil: arugula, cilantro, lettuce, lamb's lettuce, mizuna, turnips

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