The intensity of the gardening year is winding down. Once the harvest slows or stops, many people turn their attention elsewhere. However, you’re not done yet. You need to plant cover crops to protect the soil and keep it active. After all, Mother Nature likes to keep herself covered up. Cover crops are a great way to increase organic matter in your soil. In order to plant cover crops, you need to clean up what has finished in the beds. I prefer to think of it as harvesting the biomass from the spent crops for compost material. Your garden gets cleaned up, compost built, and cover crops planted.
There are many choices for cover crops-crimson clover, hairy vetch, Austrian winter peas, and cereal rye are some of them. If you are tilling everything in the spring, which crop you plant now might not be so important. (It is, actually, if you are planning fertility, but I’m dealing with timing in this post.) If you are managing your garden with hand tools, your crop choice makes all the difference. Knowing what crop will be in each bed next year determines what should be planted this fall.
Think of what time you need each bed ready to plant next year. Some crops can be planted “as soon as the soil can be worked”, which I translate as early March here in Zone 7. Other crops need to be planted only after the last spring frost (about April 26 around here). Then there are the crops that would be planted between those two times. Planning ahead now, you can put in cover crops that will be ready to harvest when the bed needs to be ready for that next crop. Make a map of your garden, showing each bed with the crops for the whole year. What you plant now will be the first crop listed in each bed on your 2013 map (and the last crop in each bed on your 2012 map.)
Thinking of those crops that you will plant the earliest in the spring, peas, lettuce and onion sets come to mind. In those spots, it is best if the previous crop has winterkilled. In that case, the winterkilled cover crop has to have put on all its growth in the fall, meaning it needs to have been planted around the end of August or early September (in Zone 7). I have to admit, I’m a little behind on that myself, and plan to put in some oilseed radish this week. Another choice might be oats. If you want to actually harvest oat seed, it needs to be planted in the spring. The radishes–oilseed, fodder or Daikon–can be harvested for your table for roasting or fermenting until about January 1. Most likely, in Zone 7 and colder, they will die back in January, but if we have a mild winter, like the last one, these crops may need a little help to return to the soil in February. In that case, cut the oats or hoe to chop the radishes and leave everything in place. If you miss your window of opportunity for planting and want to do good things for the soil, plus have it ready for the next crop on March 1, mulch that space with leaves. Pull them off a couple weeks before you want to plant the early spring crop to allow the soil to warm up.
Austrian winter peas is my crop of choice to precede things that I will plant in early April. It is too short to pull out on March 1, but has put on some growth and made the soil quite nice by April 1, when I normally plant my potatoes. I put the biomass from the winter peas in the compost. It is also the legume that can be planted the latest in the fall and still make a good crop. Planted in early September, it will grow a lot in the fall and maybe even flower. If that happens, it will most likely winterkill. Planting it in October insures that it will be a nice green cover through the winter.
The legumes are easy to pull out or cut if you need the bed sooner than expected, and the soil is wonderful and ready to plant in, with minimal preparation. Other legume choices, besides winter peas, are crimson clover and hairy vetch. I might plant those things in the beds that I will plant a main crop in about the end of April, after the last expected frost. For any of these cover crops, it is to your advantage to leave them growing until they are flowering. At that point they have put on their most growth in biomass, both above and below the ground. In addition, the flowers provide nectar to the honeybees and other beneficial insects. The clovers and vetches do best if they are planted in September or early October here in Zone 7. If you are running late with your fall planting, you can go ahead and put them in and see what happens, but know that an early frost or harsh winter might set them back.
So far, the choices I’ve mentioned are legumes. The real soil builders are the carbon crops, particularly cereal rye. You are going to get the most biomass from the roots with cereal rye, sometimes referred to as winter rye. This is different than ryegrass. What you want looks like wheat seed, not grass seed. If you talk to gardeners with tillers who have planted rye, they will tell you that it is important to till it in early because of the mass of roots that need to be churned up to decompose. If you are managing your garden with a tiller, that is good advice. If you wait past mid-March, the rye will be so thick, above and below the ground, the tiller would have a hard go of it. With hand tools, however, we are gardening smarter, not harder. I consider rye to be an important soil building and compost crop, so I’m not in a hurry to take it out. I want it to express itself as much as possible. If I let it express itself all the way to seed, it will be mid-June before the bed is ready for the next crop. At that point, I will have rye seed to eat or plant again in the fall (after I thresh it out), and straw for compost building. The plant will be finished, and even though you will see stubble in the bed after the crop is cut, you will be able to easily transplant into it or run a hoe through it to make furrows for the seeds of the next crop. Leave the stubble there and it will slowly compost back into the soil. Removing the stubble would be unnecessary work. If you were growing wheat to eat, which I highly recommend even if it is a small amount, you would manage it the same way.
Where I need the benefits of the cereal rye, but want to get the next crop in before mid-June, I’ll cut the rye at pollen shed, which is about May 7 here. That’s when it is flowering, which is the point of the most biomass. If it is cut earlier, the plants will grow back, trying to get to that seed stage. When it is shedding pollen, it is already thinking about going to seed. The roots, however, will be a mass that will be hard to get my garden fork into, let alone turn over. Of course, I’m not going to turn it over anyway. I cut the rye with my sickle and let that biomass lie there for two weeks to settle. Then I transplant into it, using a sturdy trowel or a soil knife for the job. In this case, the roots are on their way to decay, but there is still a lot there, so you wouldn’t be able to just hoe a row for seeds. This is a good system for transplanting things like tomatoes, peppers, and squash–crops that would benefit from the natural mulch that is just there—you haven’t had to haul anything! If the rye was cut May 7, transplanting wouldn’t take place until May 21.
You can see how all this works in the garden in my DVD Cover Crops and Compost Crops IN Your Garden. I’ll be at the Mother Earth News Fair this weekend at Seven Springs in Pennsylvania. Come to my presentations–Plan a Sustainable Vegetable Garden, Sustainable No-till Gardening, GROW BIOINTENSIVE® Sustainable Mini-farming and Solar Food Drying. Between my talks you can catch me at the Homeplace Earth booth. See you there!







Very good advice. Winter may in fact be the most important time of the year when it comes to keeping your garden healthy. When I lived further north, I would pile on organic matter (straw, leaves, compost, mulch) in fall and let it rot in during the rains and freezes until the spring warmth returned and it could be planted again. Even when I didn’t cover crop, I was feeding the worms and microflora/fauna and keeping the earth alive and healthy with this carboniferous blanket. Even clay softens and darkens under this kind of management.
As for winter crops – have you ever tried fava beans? I’m going to give them a spin this year for the first time and see how they do.
Our winters are a little too harsh for fall planted favas, but I remember planting them in February one year and they grew well. John Jeavons at Ecology Action in Willits, CA raves about them.
Thanks.
Jeavons is a genius – but he’s also got the benefit of a great climate. It’s too hot here for Favas in the spring, I believe, but I think I’ll try them in both Fall and Spring and see what happens. I have deliberately planted cover crops late in the year and allowed them to freeze, rot and create biomass that way. Black-eyes peas and lentils from the grocery store work well for that kind of thing. Densely pack ‘em in, they jump up and start to get big, and then death by frost returns them to the dirt.
Learning what works best in each climate is important. Keeping the soil covered and the microbes fed is the key, and it sounds like those peas and lentils does the job.
Cindy,
Having just retired and moved to Fredericksburg, after 24 yeas in Atlanta, I finally will be able to work up to a 1000 square foot garden (the garden in Atlanta was around 250 square feet). As the soil at our new home is horribly compacted from the construction, rather than hand-dig the entire area, tackling a few hundred square feet for a few years, I’d like to contract with a local tractor operator to plow, disk, and harrow so I may plant a fall-winter cover crop (likely of rye grain and Austrian winter peas–deferring to your experience in central VA).
Might you know how I might find such a tractor operator? Googling has yielded nothing (realizing, of course, it’s always a question of finding the right search-word).
Thanks for the kind assist.
Bill Boyd
Fredericksburg, VA
Bill, long ago I used to till gardens for people and advertised each spring in the local paper. Those days are gone and people use Craig’s List now, or so I’m told by my kids and younger friends. Look up http://www.craigslist.com, search under your city, then under lawn and garden. If you don’t see anyone offering those services, post a want of your own. If no one answers your query, repost every few days. The job can probably be accomplished with a tiller. In fact you might rent one and do it yourself. Till several passes, going deeper each time. Broadcast the seed, then till it in at a shallow setting. In the spring, till again. You could form beds by throwing the now loose soil from the paths into the beds. That instantly defines the beds and paths and makes it all look good. Mulch the paths or plant white clover there. Or you could inquire at the local feed store. They would be tapped into the local network and know someone who could do what you needed done.
Aye, excellent ideas. Thanks for responding.
Bill
More on thinking ahead when you are planting cover crops at http://www.motherearthnews.com/permaculture/plan-next-years-garden-now.aspx
Cool – great article, Cindy.
Cindy,
Thanks for post. Making sense of when to plant what, in relation to cover crops, is a challenge. Your DVD helps, too but this was a good summary.
Do you have an opinion on using old seed as cover crops? For example, I found a quarter pound of kale seed from 2006. I was thinking, if it came up, it would make a fall/winter cover crop then be nice for the bees in the spring. I also seem to have small amounts of various seed from years gone by I’d like to put to good use.
Vicky in VA
Vicky, using up old seed as a cover crop is a great idea, as long as you aren’t depending on it to do anything special. As you said, if it came up it would attract the bees in the spring–and lots of biomass. If you put it out now, you would know if it was growing in time to plant something else before the end of October.
Totally – I’ve done that before as well. I take my old seed and mix it into warm and cool-season baggies, then throw them across bare patches as I find them. The results are often surprising… I’ve found wildflowers and veggies I don’t remember planting. And Cindy – thanks for the reminder on Jeavons and favas. I looked his YouTube videos up again and have started soaking some favas for fall… guess I’ll see what happens. I got the seed from the local organic market in the bulk bins (I planted amaranth and rye that way before too)… hard to beat the price.
Thanks for your timely post, Cindy. We have both of your videos and have been inspired by them! We just finished planting cereal rye after we harvested potatoes. I am planting winter wheat where I took out the determinate tomatoes, and was wondering what you suggest for seed spacing and depth. My copy of Rodale’s Organic Gardening says the seeds should be about 1″ apart.
I refer to How To Grow More Vegetables by John Jeavons for plant spacing. According to that book, ultimately you would want the wheat plants to be on 5″centers. If you are broadcasting or seeding in furrows you would have to account for some seeds not germinating. I suppose 1″ depth is good. If you have my cover crop video you can see that if I’m broadcasting seed and chopping it in with the cultivator, or putting it in furrows, there is no depth measurement.
Thank you! I broadcast soft white winter wheat today and had my son chop it in with a rake. I’ll thin after the plants get established. Thanks for suggesting the Jeavons book. It’s time to get that off the shelf and take a look at it again.
Cindy,
All’s working out here in Fredericksburg: tractor with wide rototiller will work the soil over the weekend; we’ll dig in about 3 inches of compost over the ~2000 sq. ft garden, then plant rye grain.
Now that I’ve a solid source for the rye (it’s very available), I’ve just one more question for now: Could you please suggest a source for the Austrian winter pea? I’ll need 4- 6 pounds, I’m estimating.
Thanks.
Bill
You can probably buy winter peas at your local farm supply/feed store or order them from Seven Springs Farm in Check, VA. http://www.7springsfarm.com
Great post! I’ve always mulched as much of the garden as I could come up with leaves for. Those areas then get planted last the following year, because whether it’s rained or not, the soil is still moist, since no plants have sucked the water out. After years of doing this, the soil has so improved. The other thing to plant in fall is garlic. I put mine in several days ago. And covered it with chicken wire to keep the chickens from unplanting it. http://dandeliondairy.wordpress.com
Cindy,
7 Springs Farm, of course.
I’d never bought any seed there, just row cover, non-dormant oil and mycorrhizal inoculant (power form) plus a few other odds and ends. By the way, I, too, recommend 7 Springs for their range of products, extremely quick service, and their generous over-the-phone advice.
They offer a really nice selection of cover crop seeds, including buckwheat.
Thanks, again, Cindy.
Bill