create your own

Fall Vegetable Garden

63
rate or flag this page

By David Schulze


Fall is in the Air

Football season is upon us. Children have returned to school. Temperatures have started to drop.

Summer is coming to an end and Fall is upon us. This means that it is time to start that Fall Vegetable Garden. Here in San Antonio, Texas we had some really hot temperatures all Summer long. So hot that my garden stopped producing in June.

I like gardening because it helps me get down to earth. It helps relieve stress. It helps break up any boredom. It gives me something to do besides watching T.V. And there is nothing more than enjoying something that I have grown.

I put a seed in the ground then I have a plant that turns into food that I can eat. I can also have confidence that my food source is safe.

Will I save money growing my own food? Probably not. Farmers can still do it cheaper than I can.

One good advantage is I will have control over what kind of pesticides are used on my vegetables. I can nature to control the bad insects. Right now I have a lot of wasp nest growing around my house. These wasp help control the insects that may damage my garden.

But the quality of the food is much better. You have never eaten a good tomato until you have eaten one that was allowed to stay on the vine until it was ripe. What you buy in the store was picked weeks before it was really ripe.

But we will not be growing tomatoes in our Fall garden.

Fall Vegetables

What are the Fall vegetables?

This year I am going to grow Beets, Broccoli, Cabbage, Carrots, Cauliflower, two types of Lettuce, Onions, Radishes and Turnips. I am also going to plant some Green Beans that are suppose to be able to handle cold weather. You can read more about this by going to my Fall vegetable garden page.

In addition I will be planting my seeds according to the Lunar Calendar which gives the dates to plant these vegetables in September.

The lettuce I am using is loose leaf lettuce. This means that I can pick a few lettuce leaves and eat them as I need them. I can even plant some seeds in a container and grow one or two heads and pick the lettuce as I need it.

The onions will winter over and not be able to pick until Spring. Onions varieties have to be grown at certain latitudes. See this page on growing onions. Onions will keep for several months in a cool, dry place.

Broccoli, Beets, Cauliflower and Carrots can be frozen for long term storage.

Radishes will not last long and there is really no way to store these.

Cabbage will keep for several months in humid conditions as close to freezing as possible. Pull out the cabbages and hang in a moist cellar, roots and all.

Turnips will keep for three months in a cool, dry place.


Raised Vegetable Garden

This is my 8 foot long bed.
This is my 12 foot long bed.
This is my 12 foot long bed.
The blue portion is my old pation.
The blue portion is my old pation.
The second layer is from my old patio. The wood still looks good for being nine years old.
The second layer is from my old patio. The wood still looks good for being nine years old.
My Fall seeds planted with a row cover.
My Fall seeds planted with a row cover.

Rasied Garden Bed

For my back yard growing, I use raised beds. I have put in raised beds using landscape timbers against the fence that goes around my yard. However, there is a problem with this. The sun does not hit them as it needs too. I will have to move these.

For the Fall, I made two new beds using the lumber from a patio that I tore down. I used the planks from the old patio to fix another part of the patio. I turned the boards upside down and the underneath side still looks good.

I have not decided yet on what to plant in each raised bed.  My raised beds are a little higher than what is normal.  Also the way I have set this up, I can put a cover over it and extend my season.  Once I have done this I will post some photos.


Fall Garden Photos

I planted my Fall garden using furrows.
I planted my Fall garden using furrows.
Broccoli Plant Emerging
Broccoli Plant Emerging
Cucumber PLant Emerging
Cucumber PLant Emerging
Tomato Plant Emerging
Tomato Plant Emerging
Green Beans looking good.
Green Beans looking good.

Vegetable Seeds Planted

09-09-09

Well, I planted the Broccoli, Cauliflower, Cabbage and Lettuce seeds. This was the time to plant them according to the Lunar Calendar.

Within one day of planting them we received some rain. It is raining today. It is a very good rain and I am hoping that our drought is finally broken. It has been months since we have gotten a rain like we have been getting for the past couple of days.

As soon as the plants start coming up I will post some pictures. I have put a link to my garden site on this page if you would like to read more.

09-15-09

I planted some tomato, bean and cucumber seeds today to see how they do this winter. Once it starts to turn cold, I will put a cover over the garden to keep them warm.

Most of my seeds are coming up.  Interestingly, the broccoli, radish, cabbage, cauliflower and turnip plants just coming up look almost the same.

09-19-09

I planted the radish, onion, beet, turnip and carrot seeds today.

09-23-09

A lot of my crops are emerging. We have gotten a lot of rain and some cooler temps. Some of the seeds I planted may have to be replanted if the temps continue to be cool. We are expecting things to start warming up today.

Thank you for visiting this page. Please leave your comments.

RSS for comments on this Hub

David Schulze profile image

David Schulze  says:
3 months ago

9-23-09

About ten days ago, I planted some tomato seeds. They are coming up now. See the pictures above.

David Schulze profile image

David Schulze  says:
4 months ago

I do not know enough about planting tomatoes in the fall to write a hub at this time. However, I do plan on planting some tomato seeds according to the lunar chart later this month. So perhaps in a few months I will be able to write a hub on this.

bayareagreatthing profile image

bayareagreatthing  says:
4 months ago

Great Hub! I love to garden too. We were tossing around the idea of tomatoes as a fall crop. We live in CA so our weather is a little milder than other areas. Have you ever tried to grow tomatoes in the winter? If so, could you write hub about it? Thanks!!

oscarwms profile image

oscarwms  says:
4 months ago

Great hub. We in the city who have small to medium back yards grow tomatos and other vegtables and we don't have the kind of insects you guys do because growing vegtables in not normal around here. Oh but the wasps are big as your pinky finger (must be a Texas wasp). I find them not to be agressive, but my wife and neext door neighbor is frightened of them. A bunch of them jumped on a squirrel and stung it to death (thats not nice) so I had to get rid of them. They came back though. The summer is gone so they will do what ever they do to dissapear for the winter.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working