What To Plant in Midsummer for an Epic Fall Harvest

A productive fall garden starts long before fall—it starts in summer.

Once you pull out the last of your early-season crops and make space in the garden, start seeds for a new round of leafy greens, root crops, and other vegetables that thrive in cooler weather.

With good timing, you’ll continue to harvest in fall and even through winter!

Basil (70 to 80 days)

Now is the perfect time to start more basil if yours has already begun to flower. It won’t survive a light frost, but you can plan ahead and plant yours in a pot to bring inside when temperatures start dropping.

Bush beans (60 to 80 days)

Plop in a few bush bean seeds and you’ll get a decent harvest in fall. In fact, this is a good crop to succession sow every three weeks, beginning in spring after all risk of frost has passed. By midsummer, you could be on your third or fourth round of seeds!

Fava beans (85 to 95 days)

Fava beans are exceptionally cold hardy (down to 10°F), so you can sow seeds in midsummer and let the plants produce into winter. Even though they take an average of 90 days to maturity in fall, you can actually start harvesting much sooner than that.

Arugula (30 to 60 days)

Arugula’s the unicorn of leafy vegetables: it’s more heat-tolerant than most, yet can survive a light frost. And even though it thrives in cooler weather, it can germinate in very warm summer soil (up to 85°F to 90°F), making it ideal for midsummer sowing.

Brassicas (60 to 100 days)

Brassicas are the stars of the fall garden: not only are they very cold-tolerant, they actually turn sweeter after a few frosts! If you’ve always grown kale, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, kohlrabi, and collards as spring crops, then you’re in for a delicious treat!

Swipe up to read the full post!