How to Start a Cool-Season Vegetable Garden
Late summer and late winter are good times to plan and plant cool-season crops like salad greens, spinach, beets, carrots and peas
Marianne Lipanovich
August 10, 2022
Houzz Contributor. I'm a California-based writer and editor. While most of my projects are garden-based, you might also find me writing about home projects and classical music. Away from the computer, I'm found in the garden (naturally), on my bike, or ice-skating outdoors (yes, that is possible in California). I'm also willing to taste-test anything that's chocolate.
Houzz Contributor. I'm a California-based writer and editor. While most of my projects... More
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In late summer or late winter, you may think your vegetable garden is kaput. But if you live in a mild-winter climate you can keep producing fresh veggies even when it’s quite chilly out.
A cool-season vegetable garden is filled with plants that prefer the cooler temperatures and soils of fall and spring. Some even do their best with a touch of frost. For most people, cool-season vegetables are the ones you plant as summer winds down — or early in the year, when you simply can’t wait to return to the garden.
Wondering what vegetables you can plant in late summer and late winter for harvests in fall and spring? There are more options than you might think.
In late summer or late winter, you may think your vegetable garden is kaput. But if you live in a mild-winter climate you can keep producing fresh veggies even when it’s quite chilly out.
A cool-season vegetable garden is filled with plants that prefer the cooler temperatures and soils of fall and spring. Some even do their best with a touch of frost. For most people, cool-season vegetables are the ones you plant as summer winds down — or early in the year, when you simply can’t wait to return to the garden.
Wondering what vegetables you can plant in late summer and late winter for harvests in fall and spring? There are more options than you might think.
Popular crops to plant in late summer and late winter: beets, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, chard, kale, lettuces, leeks, peas, radishes and spinach.
For the connoisseur: arugula, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, celery, Chinese cabbage, collards, endive, fennel, garlic, onions, parsnips, salad greens and turnips.
Surprising cool-season crops: including asparagus, potatoes and rhubarb. Yes, they are often thought of and grown in the summer, but they prefer the cooler temperatures of spring and fall.
See how to grow each cool-season crop
For the connoisseur: arugula, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, celery, Chinese cabbage, collards, endive, fennel, garlic, onions, parsnips, salad greens and turnips.
Surprising cool-season crops: including asparagus, potatoes and rhubarb. Yes, they are often thought of and grown in the summer, but they prefer the cooler temperatures of spring and fall.
See how to grow each cool-season crop
Check For Frost Dates
While cool-season crops can even handle some frost, you’ll need to pay attention to air and soil temperatures to get the most out of your garden. This means planting early enough in fall to allow plants to reach maturity before hard frosts hit or daytime temperature drops too low (usually below about 55 degrees Fahrenheit, or 12.8 degrees Celsius). In spring, you’ll need to take the opposite approach, waiting to plant until the air and soil temperatures are warm enough for the plants to thrive.
Consider a Cold Frame
Cold frames and cloches let you put out vegetable seedlings earlier in the season and keep crops producing later in the season. They’re available commercially, but you can also make your own. Hinge the top of a cold frame to allow ventilation. If you want to plant directly in the garden, simply put the cold frame in place and remove the lid when the air temps warms up, replacing it as things cool down.
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While cool-season crops can even handle some frost, you’ll need to pay attention to air and soil temperatures to get the most out of your garden. This means planting early enough in fall to allow plants to reach maturity before hard frosts hit or daytime temperature drops too low (usually below about 55 degrees Fahrenheit, or 12.8 degrees Celsius). In spring, you’ll need to take the opposite approach, waiting to plant until the air and soil temperatures are warm enough for the plants to thrive.
Consider a Cold Frame
Cold frames and cloches let you put out vegetable seedlings earlier in the season and keep crops producing later in the season. They’re available commercially, but you can also make your own. Hinge the top of a cold frame to allow ventilation. If you want to plant directly in the garden, simply put the cold frame in place and remove the lid when the air temps warms up, replacing it as things cool down.
Find a landscape designer on Houzz
Go Green
Lettuces and other greens will quickly go to seed and become bitter in summer, but plant them during the spring and early fall and you can enjoy fresh-from-the-garden goodness for salads and sandwiches for weeks.
Lettuces and other greens will quickly go to seed and become bitter in summer, but plant them during the spring and early fall and you can enjoy fresh-from-the-garden goodness for salads and sandwiches for weeks.
Go For the Cold
Some cool-season vegetables can even cross the line and survive as cold-season vegetables. Kale in particular can survive until the temperature reaches the freezing point and may even last through snow.
Some cool-season vegetables can even cross the line and survive as cold-season vegetables. Kale in particular can survive until the temperature reaches the freezing point and may even last through snow.
Go Underground
Start quickly maturing root crops, like carrots and beets, early in the season of course, but also plant them at the end of summer to keep them going well into the fall. Both can be overwhelmingly productive if you have a single large crop, so just plan to keep sowing small rows or patches successively. That way you’ll always have something ready to go but won’t be staring at a sea of greenery and wondering if Peter Rabbit is available for some selective garden pruning.
Start quickly maturing root crops, like carrots and beets, early in the season of course, but also plant them at the end of summer to keep them going well into the fall. Both can be overwhelmingly productive if you have a single large crop, so just plan to keep sowing small rows or patches successively. That way you’ll always have something ready to go but won’t be staring at a sea of greenery and wondering if Peter Rabbit is available for some selective garden pruning.
Go For the Crunch
There’s a reason broccoli is a fall and winter favorite in the stores; it can handle the cooler temperatures. Any member of the cabbage family is a good choice for the garden when temperatures drop.
There’s a reason broccoli is a fall and winter favorite in the stores; it can handle the cooler temperatures. Any member of the cabbage family is a good choice for the garden when temperatures drop.
Go Up
Tender peas have long been considered a harbinger of spring. Start them early; you can use the same supports later in the summer to support beans, then get one last harvest of peas in during the fall.
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Tender peas have long been considered a harbinger of spring. Start them early; you can use the same supports later in the summer to support beans, then get one last harvest of peas in during the fall.
Shop for gardening tools on Houzz
Give Back to Your Garden
Fill in the empty spots in your landscape with a cover crop. While you may end up with more fava beans than you know what to do with, that’s the idea. These crops aren’t grown for food; instead, they are tilled or dug into the soil as amendments.
There are a number of options available. Legumes, as fava beans and clovers, help add nitrogen to the soil; grasses add organic matter. In this photo, clover is used to cover a hillside, but it would work just as well in a vegetable garden.
More on Houzz
Find more gardening guides
Work with a professional in your area
Shop for lawn and garden supplies
Fill in the empty spots in your landscape with a cover crop. While you may end up with more fava beans than you know what to do with, that’s the idea. These crops aren’t grown for food; instead, they are tilled or dug into the soil as amendments.
There are a number of options available. Legumes, as fava beans and clovers, help add nitrogen to the soil; grasses add organic matter. In this photo, clover is used to cover a hillside, but it would work just as well in a vegetable garden.
More on Houzz
Find more gardening guides
Work with a professional in your area
Shop for lawn and garden supplies
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I am telling my mother! She just got her own garden!
@marcia Try culantro, it looks like large blades of grass and has a stronger cilantro flavor. Best of all it’s super easy to grow, just don’t let it go to seed.
Copper mesh also helps keep the slugs away.