How to Restore the Health of Your Garden Soil Over Winter

Garden Betty

If your garden has been churning out harvest after harvest since early spring, it might be looking and feeling a little rough right now:

Compacted or eroded soil, weeds poking up in newly empty spaces, and far lower nutrient levels after you pulled out that monster zucchini crop.

Here are three easy ways to restore the health of your soil and protect it over winter so it’s ready for spring.

It starts with a layer of compost.

Every fall, top dress your garden beds with compost. There’s no need to dig it in, just spread a couple inches on top of your existing soil and let nature do its thing.

This restores nutrients and also adds volume, as a little soil is lost every time you pull out plants.

Top it off with mulch.

Compost on its own is an effective mulch, but your yard is probably full of free organic mulch in autumn that you might as well use!

Fallen leaves (preferably shredded, if they’re large and thick), pine needles, grass clippings, twigs and small branches, even annual weeds that haven’t gone to seed all make fine mulch material.

If you don’t plant a fall crop, then plant a cover crop.

There’s a cover crop for solving nearly any problem, whether you want to break up hard soil, replenish lost nutrients, or reduce soil-dwelling pests.

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Garden Betty