10 Vegetables That Can Survive Freezing

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  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • This week's gardening tip video covers the top 10 vegetables you can plant in the fall that will survive frost and freezing temperatures to give you a great backyard garden harvest this year.
    These crops need to be planted in August or September in Zones 5, 6, and 7. The 10 crops are:
    1. Spinach
    2. Carrots
    3. Kale
    4. Mache
    5. Swiss Chard
    6. Claytonia
    7. Parsley
    8. Turnips
    9. Totsoy
    10. Parsnips
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Комментарии • 14

  • @marking-time-gardens
    @marking-time-gardens Месяц назад +1

    Great video! Very encouraging! We also have had sucess with winter harvesting Egyptian onions... with protection... and just harvesting the green leaves and leaving the root in the ground allowed the plant to recover in the spring and keep on producing. Keeping it as a perennial. Looking forward to watching your free workshop! Great to find a channel with similar growing conditions! Thank you! 🌻🐛🌿💚🙏💕👵

  • @howardfowler2255
    @howardfowler2255 Месяц назад +2

    Mature bunch onions and mixed leaf lettuce plants just took temps in my area ( zone 7b eastern Tenn.) down to 16 degrees. Plants were covered with frost blankets and were grown on the south side of my house. But our coldest weather is in late Dec.and Jan. Into Feb. so may have to add a blanket of leaves like I did last winter when temps hit into the single digits( to 6 degrees F.). Nice,informative video- thanks!

    • @StoneyAcresGardening
      @StoneyAcresGardening  Месяц назад

      It sounds like you are already doing a great job protecting your plants!

  • @Grow-all-year
    @Grow-all-year Месяц назад +1

    Ive been letting my claytonia and mache flower and go to seed in spring. It now comes up on its own in my winter tunnel

  • @mariaallevato6121
    @mariaallevato6121 Месяц назад +3

    I built a hoop house and covered our plants with a fabric row cover underneath. Most of them have lived, but I have a TON of aphids. How do I prevent that?

    • @StoneyAcresGardening
      @StoneyAcresGardening  Месяц назад +3

      The key to preventing aphids organically is to cover the plants with a bug netting or a light fabric row cover as soon as you plant them. That will keep them out from day one.
      To deal with them now, you can treat with insecticidal soap, or Neem, or if it is still warm enough you can take a hose out to the garden and wash the aphids off with water. This time of year they will never survive once washed off the plant.

  • @XDCanada_
    @XDCanada_ Месяц назад +5

    I have some kale in the open,what would you recommend to cover with when it gets near 0 degrees Fahrenheit

    • @StoneyAcresGardening
      @StoneyAcresGardening  Месяц назад +2

      That cold I would say both a hoop house and heavy fabric row cover. But since you probably can't get a hoop house built this late in the year I would just say cover with a couple of layers of Heavy Fabric Row Cover. 2.0 oz/square meter/yard

    • @XDCanada_
      @XDCanada_ Месяц назад +2

      Thanks Rick

  • @helenmcclellan452
    @helenmcclellan452 Месяц назад +2

    Should I cover my onion sets and kale? I have hoops I can put up.

    • @StoneyAcresGardening
      @StoneyAcresGardening  Месяц назад +2

      Yes, If you have hoops I would always cover them once you start getting temperatures lower than about 28 F.

  • @thedirtonemily
    @thedirtonemily 20 дней назад

    I'm in zone 6B as well and our late August and a lot of September the past few years have been really warm and sunny. You said he have a hard time starting these cold hardy veggies outside 6-8 before you last frost - do you shade them until the temperatures fall below 70-80F?

  • @657449
    @657449 27 дней назад +1

    Watch your temperatures . You might have to open up your beds during the day so they don’t bake.

    • @StoneyAcresGardening
      @StoneyAcresGardening  24 дня назад

      Yes that is for sure the case in the fall and spring. This time of year it isn't an issue, even on the warmest days the cold frames never get warmer than 60 to 70.