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How to Extend Your Raised Garden’s Growing Season

If like me you're finding youself going to and from the Garden centre a lot a the moment you might have asked youself, is this all worth it? Don't get me wrong I love my plants, but I wish there was a way to get just that little bit more out of them, every year it seems like they barely get a chance to shine before the season ends.

There are a few things you can do to challenge this, and this is one of them...
Raised garden bedsare just that little bit closer to the sun. As a result, by late autumn, the soil remains warmer than traditional gardens. This gives your plants and flowers a better chance at remaining strong over the impending winter cold that is inevitably to follow as the autumn sun fades away. Raised Garden Beds also add a lovely layered look to your garden and gives it more aesthetic character, while still being a very practical way to grow your vegetables and plants.
While raised garden beds give an extra extension to the growing season, there are ways to extend this even further. Try these handy hints to keep your garden growing even as the weather gets colder.
Plant hardy crops such as radish and kale beneath a portable plastic greenhouse. Place a grow light above the top of the cover and leave it on overnight to keep the seeds growing. Christmas lights can be just as effective as a light and warmth source, as well as getting your garden decorated for the upcoming festive season.Cover raised garden beds with sheets or blankets at night to trap in the heat that accumulates through the day. As soon as the sun is shining, take the covers away.Use floating row covers to let light shine through and get a couple of degrees of warmth in there. These also protect plants winds and frost.Try draping a plastic cover over the plant, with the aluminised side of a space blanket facing the ground on particularly cold night. This will be a great frost protection strategy.Plant vegetable seeds that are going to grow well in the winter weather. In particular, salad greens and root crops have the best reputation for staying strong as the temperature drops. Spinach and aragula are particular cold hardy, and the best part is these are plants that will give you extra strength with all the nutrients when you eat them after harvesting.Keep time on your side and start you winter in early autumn so that it is well established before the frost flakes in. You can always plant greens and seeds indoors in small containers, and transfer them outside once the weather is moderate enough.


This post first appeared on The Yard, please read the originial post: here

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How to Extend Your Raised Garden’s Growing Season

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