5 Late Summer Gardening Tips

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Morning Harvest from vegetable garden

Late Summer Gardening Tips

The Kitchen Garden has begun to wane.  As the vine leaves have begin to die, they reveal a cornucopia of squash and tomatoes.  Keeping the beds viable past their peak takes some effort.  For most weekend gardeners, it simply another part of the season.

Don’t Forget to Water

Heavy rains can make the weekend gardner complacent.  Don’t be that guy or girl.  While tomatoes and cucumbers are subject to root rot from too much water, squash tends to send their roots deep into the ground as each plant likes to spread out and claim more and more territory.  Pumpkins, Zucchini, and their various relatives within the Cucurbitaceae genus will continue to produce throughout the late Summer and early Fall if properly cared for.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Don’t Forget to Prune

For the 2nd of our 5 late summer gardening tips we take the lesson of John 15:2 quite literally.  Dead branches serve only to steal energy and nutrients from those which are producing.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Diligent pruning is an essential task for the weekend gardner. My wife’s medium-duty poultry shears work very well.

This is easier done on some plants than on others.  With tomatoes for instance,  it’s pretty obvious which branches need to go.  Take care with squash.   Dying leaves on Pumpkins and Zucchini are still feeding the produce so you may need to wait until they are truly spent before removing them.

 

My long-suffering wife hears it from me all the time.  “If you want to get the most out of your flowers and vegetables, sometimes you have to be mean to them.”  We have this standard joke with our rose bushes out front.

She always says I’m going to kill them and of course they always give us a second bloom and come back the following year.  This past Summer one of them finally gave up the ghost.  “See?  After 15 years, I was right.”  Of course you were, my Princess.  We’ve replaced it with a hydrangea.

Harvest Throughout the Season

Experience, naturally is the best teacher.  After a few seasons, you will know which fruits and vegetables are ready for picking.  Gardening is not Farming.  With Gardening, each edible is precious.

Don’t Add Fertilizer

Of all the 5 late summer gardening tips, this one is the easiest, because you literally have to do nothing.  Resist the temptation to mix that last little bit of powdered plant food you picked up at the garden center in the Spring.  It’s a waste of time and effort.  Adding manure at this point will simply harm you plants since it takes weeks and sometimes months for it to release the stored methane.

Know When It’s Time to Pull

This might be the most important of our 5 late summer gardening tips.  It is essential to learn to let go since not every plant is a winner. Aesthetics count.  A Kitchen Garden should be beautiful as well as practical.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

This Plum Tomato Plant suffered from root rot all Summer long due to too much rain.  Plucking it out of the ground at this point would be an act of mercy.

Hope some of this helps.  Enjoy this year’s photo journal.

The Colonel’s Garden – 2018 Photo Journal

Inside The Enclosure

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

A Garden Gate doesn’t get this beautiful over night. It takes The Almighty over a decade to weather it to perfection. This year I decided to touch up the lettering with a soldier blue acrylic.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Eggplants weigh down two plants just inside the gate.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

The last two Acorn Squash. Spearmint provides a nice additive to ice tea.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Exhausted cucumber vines.

The cucumbers had us scratching our heads this year.  Most of them tended to turn yellow overnight as soon as they hit 3-4 inches in length.  We were able to pick enough to fill 2 pickle jars, and we ended up tossing about 30 of them.  Not happy about that, but live and learn.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Branches groan under the weight of the abundant Beefsteak Tomatoes.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Sun Flowers add a splash of color.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Give it another couple of days.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Jalapeños. Oh, yes.

Outside The Enclosure

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Butternut Squash.  One of the “extra” seedlings and a pleasant surprise.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Marigolds standing guard. Among the easiest plants to grow, they add a touch of color to any garden and emit a natural insect repellent.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

A pollen covered bumble bee takes a breather on a fence post. A sure sign that your garden is maintaining it’s viability through the late Summer.

Pumpkin Patch

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

The sign says it all.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

A pumpkin vine spreads out from it’s bed across the lawn.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

As the leaves begin to clear, we get a glimpse of the garden’s yield.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Morning Glories. Who can argue with this?

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

From Humble beginnings.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Pumpkin bud

The Throw-Aways

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

The Throw-Away Patch. About a dozen pots were left over from the initial planting. I figured – sure, why not?

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Throw Away Patch Grafted Vine

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

And to think, I almost didn’t plant this one.

Getting Wild

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Wild Morning Glory crawls along the ground by the burn barrel.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Happy accidents as Bob Ross would say. A wild zucchini vine spreads out in front of the deck.

 

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Wild zucchini tap root.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

By the ramp leading to the shed, a wild pumpkin vine made for a pleasant surprise.

Another “Left-over”

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

An extra seedling planted at the base of the back deck soon flourishes and wraps it’s way around the post.

Here are 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips that will keep your plants producing as we transition to The Fall.

Thanks for stopping buy.  I’ll try to post an update next week.

This post contains affiliate links. Your cost is the same, but I earn a commission when you shop through them. For more information, click here.

The Vegetable Gardener's Bible, 2nd Edition: Discover Ed's High-Yield W-O-R-D System for All North American Gardening Regions: Wide Rows, Organic Methods, Raised Beds, Deep SoilMore InformationThe Grumpy Gardener: An A to Z Guide from the Galaxy's Most Irritable Green ThumbMore InformationThe Backyard Gardener: Simple, Easy, and Beautiful Gardening with Vegetables, Herbs, and FlowersMore InformationWeedless GardeningMore InformationBackyard Harvest: A year-round guide to growing fruit and vegetablesMore InformationTrellises, Planters & Raised Beds: 50 Easy, Unique, and Useful Projects You Can Make with Common Tools and MaterialsMore InformationFiskars All Steel Bypass Pruning ShearsMore InformationFiskars Softouch Garden Tool 3 Piece Set, 70676935JMore InformationEdward Tools Hoe and Cultivator Hand Tiller - Carbon Steel Blade - Heavy duty for loosening soil, weeding and digging - Rubber ergo grip handle - Rust proofMore Information

Late Summer Gardening Tips

Facebook Comments

About Phil Christensen

The trail behind me is littered with failure. The trail before me remains to be seen.
This entry was posted in Gardening, Hearth and Altar. Bookmark the permalink.

6 Responses to 5 Late Summer Gardening Tips

  1. Pingback: Italian Tomato Soup with Grilled Cheese Croutons | Walking on Sunshine Recipes

  2. Pingback: Welcome Fall with New Printables | Walking on Sunshine Recipes

  3. Pingback: Italian Tomato Soup with Grilled Cheese Croutons | Good Cookery

  4. Loni says:

    Thank you for the tips! I have such a hard time trimming/cutting off dead branches, so I’m in agreement with your wife. Although I struggle because I know it’s good for the plants, so I usually let my husband go at it for me! I’m glad I’m not the only lady with this problem too. Your garden looks beautiful!

  5. Mary says:

    Those pumpkins are looking really great!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *