Fall is the beginning of our best growing season--the cool-weather vegetables. Here in north Florida we normally experience our first frost sometime in
late December, but the soil never freezes and we can grow many crops
right through the winter. This is why we set up the three planting calendars (for north, central, and south Florida) to begin in September, not January, in "Organic Methods for Vegetable Gardening in Florida."
We have three beds next to the western-facing back of the house: the herb garden next to the porch door, the middle bed, and the north bed.
I'd grown marigolds across most of the north and middle beds over the summer and had also grown tomatoes and peppers in the middle bed. When I finally pulled the tomatoes in August, I turn marigolds under in both beds except for the peppers row--they are still producing to some extent. I also had composted kitchen scraps under all of the north bed.
After more than a month of in-the-ground composting, freshly uncovered soil in the middle bed. |
Kitchen scraps used in the trench between the rows. |
The Middle Bed
We have three beds next to the western-facing back of the house: the herb garden next to the porch door, the middle bed, and the north bed.
I'd grown marigolds across most of the north and middle beds over the summer and had also grown tomatoes and peppers in the middle bed. When I finally pulled the tomatoes in August, I turn marigolds under in both beds except for the peppers row--they are still producing to some extent. I also had composted kitchen scraps under all of the north bed.