Coaxing Fresh Vegetables From the Garden All Winter Long
Autumn typically signals the end of home grown vegetables from the
garden, but with a little ingenuity you can harvest garden fresh
produce well into the winter months. My Central Pennsylvania garden
continues to supply fresh vegetables during the fall and winter when
most gardeners in my growing region are content to dream about next
summer’s bounty. Read on to discover simple tricks that will fortify
your garden against the onslaught of frigid weather.
Fall often delivers brief cold spells with a few frost filled
mornings, sandwiched between weeks of milder, frost-free weather. The
problem is that a single touch of frost can wipe out every tender
annual growing in the garden. Fortunately, a little protection will
enable frost sensitive vegetables and herbs to survive a cold snap, and reward the resourceful gardener with an opportunity to enjoy extended harvests.
Something as simple as the transparent, fleecy, floating row covers
used to shield plants from harmful insects can also prevent frost
damage. Row covers trap the warmth that radiates up from the earth much
like the way that a cloud cover holds temperatures and prevents frost
from forming. Row covers offer a few degrees of protection, keeping
tender annuals safe from light frost. Use the thicker grade covers for
maximum benefit.
Late summer is the ideal time to sow cold tolerant vegetables that
will flourish in the fall and endure cold weather without complaint.
Examples of hardy vegetables for fall gardening
include: kale, spinach, collards, broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels
Sprouts, kohlrabi, turnips, cabbages, oriental greens, rutabagas, and
some varieties of lettuce.
Once freezing conditions arrive, even cold hardy crops will
appreciate some protection if they remain in the garden. Cardboard
boxes and fruit baskets can provide shelter to individual plants, while
old sheets, blankets, and heavy plastic tarps will protect entire rows
or beds
of plants. Apply the coverings in the evening when freezes are forecast
and remove them the following morning after the sun warms the air.
Another effective solution is to use a commercial variety of cloche,
or to set up a portable cold frame over the garden bed. Cloches include
the heavy glass, bell shaped jars, or variously styled and shaped rigid plastic devices.
One style of cold frame consists of a tubular frame covered by a
woven poly material with flaps for venting. You can also obtain
sturdier cold frames made with aluminum framing and twin wall
polycarbonate panels that lift up for venting. Regardless of the type
of protection used to cover your plants you must remove it or provide
venting during the day as temperatures rise.
Resourceful gardeners can combine a few discarded window sashes and
bales of straw to create a simple makeshift cold frame. Just arrange
the straw bales into a rectangular shape around a garden bed and lay
the windows across the top to form an enclosed and insulated growing
area. This setup will work great to keep a bed of leafy greens growing
further into the winter.
Oddly enough, water can protect and insulate plants from the cold.
Commercial orchards actually spray water and mist onto their trees to
prevent frost damage.
In the home garden
you can employ plastic gallon jugs filled with water to provide
protection. Place the containers around plants, under floating row
covers or tarps, and inside of your cold frames.
The water will absorb and store heat during the day and release it
at night to provide warmth for your plants. You’ll get the best results
by painting
the jugs black so that they’ll absorb more energy from the sun during
the day. Incredibly, even if the water in the container freezes, it
will continue to release a significant amount of heat energy into the
surrounding area.
Some vegetables will survive on their own in the garden through
bitterly cold conditions. Leeks, kale, and collards frequently
withstand harsh winters without any protection. Fall planted garlic and
shallots will develop strong root systems in the fall, spend the winter
underground, and then spring up at the earliest signs of the arrival of
spring.
Many root crops including beets, carrots, turnips, rutabagas, and
parsnips can be left in the garden protected with a thick layer of
shredded leaves or straw. You can then continue harvesting as needed,
provided that the ground doesn’t freeze and prevent digging. Finish
harvesting before spring arrives though, since quality will degrade
once the roots resume growing and switch into seed production mode.
With
proper planning and a little extra care you can easily grow and harvest
vegetables beyond the normal spring and summer seasons. Simply
implement a few of the ideas presented in this article and you’ll soon
enjoy your own home grown, fresh produce much longer than usual

, possibly even year-round.