Select Language

English

Down Icon

Select Country

Netherlands

Down Icon

Loading

garden in autumn: planting garlic
Photo: Tim Sandall.

This month is still a great time to plant garlic for an early summer harvest. When sowing, ensure the soil is well-draining, otherwise the cloves will rot in winter. Sow the cloves on ridges, for example, to keep them drier.

Read also softneck garlic
The best growing tips and more than 50 recipes! €12.99
From garden to table
  • Our best tips for year-round cooking from your own garden
  • From patio to allotment: vegetable gardening is possible everywhere!
  • With recipes from famous Dutch and Flemish chefs
Order now
From garden to table
creating a winter vegetable garden with, among other things, lettuce.
Photo: Sarah Cuttle.

If you sow lettuce in October, you might get a small harvest before winter. After that, they'll take a winter break. But from March onwards, the leaves will quickly start growing again, yielding an early harvest. Protect the plants from the worst of the weather with fleece or a grow box over the winter.

Read also sow lettuce all year round
Someone is sowing a broad bean in the open ground of the vegetable garden.
Photo: Jason Ingram.

You can also sow broad beans in October to get a head start before the plants go into winter dormancy. As soon as spring is warm and light enough, they'll quickly resume growth. If you sowed broad beans in September, you can also plant out the seedlings now.

Read also Mature broad bean plant, tied up with sticks and wire.
Planting bare root fruit trees

October marks the start of the bare-root season. Trees and shrubs are much cheaper to buy as rootstock than in pots the rest of the year. For fruit trees, be sure to choose the right rootstock – for example, M27 (low-stem apple tree) or Quince C (low-stem pear tree).

Read also Quince
Gooseberry berry bush
Gooseberries. Photo: Sarah Cuttle.

Currants and gooseberries are also available more cheaply as bare-root plants between October and March. Plant them immediately after purchase, as this gives them the best chance to establish before temperatures drop. You can plant them all winter long (except when the ground is frosty), as long as the bushes are dormant. You can also choose to plant them in a temporary location (ensiling).

Tip!

gardenersworldmagazine

gardenersworldmagazine

Similar News

All News
Animated ArrowAnimated ArrowAnimated Arrow