EasyUp Horticulture Garden Bed, Divisible Resin Planter Box for Backyard, Patio, Balcony
$76.99 (as of 13:06 GMT -05:00 - More infoProduct prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on [relevant Amazon Site(s), as applicable] at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.)Brightpeak 8 FT Outdoor Wooden Raised Garden Bed, Elevated Planting Planter Box Kit for Flowers/Vegetables/Herbs in Backyard/Patio/Outdoor, Natural
$55.98 (as of 13:33 GMT -05:00 - More infoProduct prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on [relevant Amazon Site(s), as applicable] at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.)Autumn sometimes signals the end of home grown vegetables from the garden, but with a little ingenuity you can crop garden fresh produce well into the winter months. My Central Pennsylvania garden continues to deliver fresh plants in the fall and winter when most gardeners in my growing area are content to fantasize about next summer’s bounty.
Read on to find out easy tricks that may fortify your garden against the attack of frigid weather. Fall regularly delivers short lived cold spells with one or two frost filled mornings, stuck between weeks of milder, frost-free conditions. Something as straightforward as the transparent, fleecy, floating row covers used to shield plants from dangerous insects can also forestall frost damage. Use the thicker grade covers for max benefit. Late summer is the perfect time to sow cold long suffering vegetables that may flourish in the autumn and endure chilly weather without complaint.
Once freezing conditions arrive, even cold hardy crops will appreciate some protection if they remain in the garden. Card boxes and fruit baskets can offer shelter to individual plants, while old sheets, blankets, and heavy plastic tarps will protect whole rows or beds of plants.
Apply the coverings in the evening when freezes are predicted and remove them the following morning after the sun warms the air. Another practical answer is to utilise a commercial spread of cloche, or to line up a movable cold frame over the garden bed. One type of cold frame is composed of a tubular frame covered by a woven poly material with flaps for venting. You may also get sturdier cold frames made with aluminium framing and twin wall polycarbonate panels that pick up for venting. Without reference to the kind of protection used to cover your plants you need to remove it or provide venting in the daytime as temperatures rise. Ingenious gardeners can blend 1 or 2 dropped window sashes and bales of straw to form a straightforward temporary cold frame.
Just organize the straw bales into an oblong shape around a garden bed and lay the windows across the top to form an enclosed and insulated growing area. This set-up will work well to keep a bed of leafy greens growing farther into the winter. Oddly enough, water can protect and insulate plants from the cold. Commercial orchards essentially spray water and mist onto their trees to stop frost damage. In the home garden you can employ plastic gallon jugs crammed with water to provide protection. The water will absorb and store heat during the daytime and release it at night to provide heat for your plants. You will get the finest results by painting the jugs black so that they will absorb more power from the sun in the daytime. Stunningly whether or not the water in the container freezes, it may continue to release a major quantity of heat energy into the encircling area. Certain veg will survive all alone in the garden thru bitterly cold conditions. Leeks, kale, and collards often bear oppressive winters without any protection. Fall planted garlic and shallots will develop powerful root systems in the autumn, spend the winter underground, and then spring up at the earliest indicators of the coming of spring. Many root crops including beets, carrots, turnips, rutabagas, and parsnips can get left in the garden protected with a thick layer of shredded leaves or straw. You may then continue cropping as required, provided the ground does not freeze and forestall digging. Complete your cropping before spring arrives though, since quality will degrade once the roots resume growing and switch into seed production mode. With good planning and slightly more care you can simply grow and crop plants outside the ordinary spring and summer seasons. Simply implement a couple of the ideas presented in this piece and you will soon enjoy your own residence grown, fresh goods much longer than normal, possibly even all year.