Stop Fighting Your Garden: Here's What to Do Next
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Is your garden looking tired, stressed, or downright apocalyptic in the middle of summer? In this episode of The Compost Pile, David and Aaron discuss one of the hardest lessons for gardeners to learn: knowing when it's time to let go of declining crops and start planning for what's next.
We cover how to identify when tomatoes, cucumbers, herbs, and other spring vegetables have reached the end of their productive season, why holding on too long can limit your garden's success, and how Southeast Texas gardeners can take advantage of a second warm-season planting window.
You'll learn:
• When to remove struggling summer vegetables
• How Zone 9a gardening seasons differ from traditional growing zones
• Why fall gardening in Southeast Texas starts much earlier than most people think
• Which crops can be replanted for a second harvest
• How to refresh garden soil between planting seasons
• Tips for starting fall tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash, and more
• Direct sowing recommendations for lettuce, broccoli, carrots, beets, radishes, and other cool-season crops
• Ways to use shade cloth, companion planting, and mulch to improve fall garden success
Southeast Texas Planting Guide:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/12C-g-bN81UGhXUKeNeJrHRAL3FKTlyvr/view?usp=sharing
If you're gardening in Southeast Texas, the Gulf Coast, or any warm-climate growing region, this episode will help you transition from summer garden cleanup into a productive fall vegetable garden.
#TheCompostPile #Zone9aGardening #TexasGardening #FallGarden #VegetableGardening #RaisedBedGardening #GardeningTips #Homesteading #GardenPlanning #GrowYourOwnFood