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Seattle Urban Farm Company - Garden trellises and supplies

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Episode 59: Crops That Mature In 40 Days Or Less

August 25, 2017 hilary dahl
Hakurai_Seattle Urban Farm Co.

It may not feel like it, but the clock is ticking quickly toward the first frost of Fall. This means your planting options are much more limited than they are earlier in the season, but there are still many crops that mature quickly and can be planted ahead of frost arriving in your garden. This episode includes a round-up of crops that mature in 40 days or less. We picked 40 days because there are very few crops that can mature in fewer than this many days, but it is still a short enough period (just over a month) that it is easy to plan for and execute even in the waning days of the summer. Consider this your last call for planting and get out there and sow some seeds!


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SHOW NOTES:

In this episode, we discuss:

  • Short season crops that thrive in the fall

  • Growing and harvesting crops for late-summer seeded crops.

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Important Take-aways:

  • Radishes: Radishes can be ready to harvest in as little as 20 days after direct seeding. All radish varieties will grow well in late summer and early fall, and there are also varieties that will only grow reliably in fall conditions, including watermelon radish, daikon, and nero tondo.

  • Turnips: Turnips are one of the most reliable fall crops. The traditional type is called Purple Top White Globe, which grow wonderfully in the fall.

  • Mustard Greens: There are seemingly endless varieties of mustard greens to choose from. Varieties we recommend are mizuna, green wave, and minutina, as well as purple-leaved types including purple mizuna, ruby streaks, scarlet frills and red wave. Mustards grow quickly and are also very cold and frost tolerant.

  • Arugula: Arugula can be ready to harvest in as little as 30 days after seeding. There are many varieties to choose from, and arugula is surprisingly cold tolerant.

  • Cilantro: Growing cilantro late in the season is the best because it is much slower to bolt and holds a lot longer in the garden than in the spring and summer. It can also survive through frost and makes a great winter crop.

  • Spinach: probably the most cold hardy, commonly grown salad green. We just did an episode on spinach so I won’t say too much about it here except that it can easily grow to maturity in 40 days, so get planting!

  • Lettuce Mix: Lettuce mix will germinate and grow better in late summer / early fall conditions and may be able to provide 2 harvests if planted with 40+ days left. It does not survive frost well, so harvest all of your baby lettuce if frosts are imminent.

  • Baby Beets: Some varieties of beets, like Babybeat, can mature to baby size in 40 days. Any type can be grown as a baby beet if harvested at baby size, they just may not be shaped up. Beets do not tolerate frost well, so harvest all of your crop before the first frost.

  • Pac Choi: There are many types of Bok choi and some types take 60+ days to mature. However, some baby types can be ready in 30 days; one favorite is Shiro which can be ready in 30 days!

  • Kohlrabi (Honorable Mention): Technically, kohlrabi takes about 45-50 days to mature, but it grows very well in fall weather and if you don’t mind picking it a little small it is likely to be full size or almost full size within 40 days. Make sure to pick fresh eating types (not storage types); our favorite is the purple type called Kolibri.


You might also be interested in:
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Jul 1, 2020
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Featured
Hilary Dahl
Hilary Dahl

Hilary Dahl is a co-owner of Seattle Urban Farm Company and host of the Encyclopedia Botanica podcast. Since 2010 Hilary Dahl has been helping beginning and experienced growers create beautiful and productive gardens. She has the unique experience of working in on a wide range of projects, from small backyard garden plots to multi-acre vegetable farms. She also works in her own garden every day after work. Hilary is also the creator of our podcast, the Encyclopedia Botanica, which she started as a way to share effective and efficient garden management techniques, and as a way to spread her love of growing food and flowers!

Colin McCrate
Colin McCrate

Colin McCrate has been growing food organically for over 25 years. He worked on a variety of small farms in the Midwest before moving to the west coast in 2003 to teach garden-based environmental education. He founded the Seattle Urban Farm Company in 2007 with the goal of applying years of horticultural and agricultural expertise to help aspiring growers get projects off the ground or more accurately; in the ground.

Since starting Seattle Urban Farm Co in 2007, he has helped guide hundreds of urban farmers through the design, construction and management of their own edible landscape. Colin is the author of three books; Food Grown Right, In Your Backyard(Mountaineers Books, 2012) and Grow More Food (Storey Publishing, 2022); and is a garden writer for the Seattle Times.

In Annual Vegetables, Fall, Podcast, Crop Planning Tags Encyclopedia Botanica, Podcast, fall gardening, edible gardening, vegetable gardening, kitchen garden, organic garden, organic gardening, beets, turnips, how to grow radishes, how to grow turnips, how to grow beets
← Episode 60: Season Extension with Guest Niki JabbourEpisode 58: Spinach →
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