September Begins the Garden Year
Occasionally, I update and repost a favorite blogpost because of its pertinence to the season. I revel in the thought that September begins the garden year, especially now as my summer garden fades. I credit Robert Smaus and Renee Shepherd with this perspective.
When I moved back to Southern California in the 1990’s I took my garden cues from Robert Smaus, Garden Editor of the Los Angeles Times. In his legendary book, 52 Weeks in the California Garden he makes an elegant distinction “between gardening in Southern California and gardening elsewhere.” Smaus goes on to say, “In our climate, fall is spring, at least as far as planting is concerned, and autumn, not spring, should be our busiest time in the garden.”
Soon, the weather will cool to the autumn norms and I’m preparing to plant my fall and winter crops. The cool season garden (think, for example, lettuce, broccoli, carrots, kale, arugula) is easy and an optimal time for new gardeners to venture into the garden. There are fewer pests and weeds, reduced watering (especially when we get rain). The pace seems less harried than in summer.
Renee Shepherd, owner of Renee’s Garden, a California seed company touts the virtues of the Second Season Garden:
“Late planted crops have less competition from weeds and pests and grow beautifully with less garden work. In mild-winter areas of the country, you'll have great harvests in time for Thanksgiving and many crops will hold perfectly through the low light winter months without bolting to seed or becoming bitter tasting as they would in the heat of early summer.”
The seasons are changing—the summer garden yields to the winter garden. The tomatoes, pole beans, corn and peppers finish their run in my garden. Cucumbers and zucchini departed recently. The raised bed is prepared for the broccoli starts which will be transplanted in the next two weeks.
Follow along as I plant my winter garden over the coming weeks.