The
first hard frost was enough to kill nearly everything in the garden but it was
a couple weeks before I could get in to clean up everything. It is always a bit
sad to see everything suddenly brown when just a day earlier it was all
brilliant and green. But it’s also nice to know that the growing season is done
and it time for the next step.
I
like to pull out all the dead plants in the fall. Some people let them stand
and then till them into the soil in the spring. I like the look of a cleaned up
garden bed so I pull everything out. Some of the dead plants I put into the
compost bin. Some I leave on the beds. I don’t really have a scientific process
for this. It just depends on what I feel like that day. For example, the
eggplants, though they barely produced any fruit, set out deep roots. When I
pulled the plants, a lot of soil came with them. So, I decided to leave the
plants lying in the garden bed so I can shake some more soil off of them in the
spring. The tomatoes, I removed to the brush heap in the back. Toward the end
of the season the leaves got brown and spotty so I don’t want the plants lying
on the soil. Similarly, when the fungus hit my chard and beets mid-season, I put
the infected leaves out back. The lettuce, when I finally pull it will go into
the compost bin.
Even
as I type this, just days before Thanksgiving, the lettuce is still going
strong. I was going to tear it out two weekends ago when I took care of the
rest of the plants but a honey bee was working over the tiny lettuce flowers.
The weather was so hot after I planted the second round of seeds that the
lettuce came up bitter. But the plants looked nice so I just let them grow. Now
I am pleased that there was something there for the little pollinators to work
on later into the season.
Lettuce flowers |
Shh, the asparagus is sleeping. |
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