Crops You Can Grow in Cooler Weather
Many times in the early fall,
and even in to the fall months, I debate on whether it is really time
to turn the heat on in my greenhouse. I usually think about it frosting
outside, and then the frost gets heavier and heavier and I watch my thermometer
in the greenhouse to know when I need to start using my heat. I live out
in the boonies as some would say and when the cold weather
finally decides to come it is here to stay. So, between the times when
I am finishing out my outdoor gardens and I am starting more and more
plants in the greenhouse for the winter months I have found that there
are quite a few plants and vegetables that do well in the greenhouse during
this cooler time.
Even when the temperatures are getting a little bit
cooler, the sun is still shining in and around my greenhouse. As the sun
continues to shine, my daylight temperatures are quite appealing to growing
plants even if it is only forty or fifty degrees in the greenhouse. Some
great vegetables that do well in the cooler temperatures are radishes,
onions, certain types of cabbages, carrots, lettuce, spinach, and even
beets will grow well in the cooler weather.
When the weather is a little cooler I also am getting
ready to turn the heat on in my greenhouse, so I start gathering up my
seeds for the winter that I want to grow. I also start finding out how
many pots I have and stuff so that when I turn my heat on I can start
getting my winter garden underway!
As the summer is turning cooler I also start bringing
in most of my container garden flowers. I can extend their life well into
November and December when I cut them back and then water them so they
will bloom one last time for me.
Even when my greenhouse dips a little down under the
forty degree mark, I know they are not freezing yet, and I let the heat
do off for just one more day. Growing and raising plants in a cooler atmosphere
does make them a little hardier. When you are thinking about turning the
heat off in the spring months you should remember not to baby
your plants to much or you will shock them when you take them out of the
conditioned environment of the greenhouse.
This article was published
by: Garden Moose.
Garden Moose is a
feature contributor to Greenhouses.com
a leading internet destination for gardening and greenhouse information
and ideas.
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