In this video, I share the top 10 vegetables you can still plant in November for a beautiful fall garden! Fall gardening season is one of the best times to grow vegetables, and these easy fall crops thrive in cool weather. These fall vegetables are cold hardy, frost tolerant, and are staple crops when planting a fall garden that will provide big harvests deep into winter and beyond.

All 10 of these fall crops can be sown in November for a fall harvest or winter harvest, depending on your climate and days to maturity. These crops will also thrive in a winter garden, especially with a little cold protection.

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How To Grow Lettuce: https://youtu.be/QQKfDPzUE5g?si=QeJ9xdXtswuWgeyG

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The links to seeds above are affiliate links. If you choose to use them, I would receive a small commission at no cost to you.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
0:00 Gardening In November Tips
2:18 Fall Vegetable #1
3:31 Fall Vegetable #2
4:55 Fall Vegetable #3
6:48 Fall Vegetable #4
7:50 Fall Vegetable #5
9:33 Fall Vegetable #6
10:47 Fall Vegetable #7
13:07 Fall Vegetable #8
14:39 Fall Vegetables #9 & #10
17:50 Adventures With Dale

If you have any questions about these autumn garden vegetables and are looking for fall gardening tips, have questions about growing fruit trees or want to know about the things I grow in my raised bed vegetable garden and edible landscaping food forest, are looking for more gardening tips and tricks and garden hacks, have questions about vegetable gardening and organic gardening in general, or want to share some DIY and “how to” garden tips and gardening hacks of your own, please ask in the Comments below!

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ABOUT MY GARDEN
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34.1°N Latitude
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#gardening #garden #gardeningtips #fallgarden #fallgardening

41 Comments

  1. If you enjoyed this video, please Like it and share it to help increase its reach! Thanks for watching🙂TIMESTAMPS here:
    0:00 Gardening In November Tips
    2:18 Fall Vegetable #1
    3:31 Fall Vegetable #2
    4:55 Fall Vegetable #3
    6:48 Fall Vegetable #4
    7:50 Fall Vegetable #5
    9:33 Fall Vegetable #6
    10:47 Fall Vegetable #7
    13:07 Fall Vegetable #8
    14:39 Fall Vegetables #9 & #10
    17:50 Adventures With Dale

  2. I have a question…I also live in NC and I have been looking for fruiting cherry trees but I can not find them anywhere. Why is that? I’m sure they would produce fruit here I had a child hood friend that had a cherry tree in her back yard and we would eat them so why do the nursery’s not carry them. If anyone knows where to find them I would love to know. I know I can order them but I’m not a fan of buying live plants online I would like to put my hands and eyes on it! North east of Raleigh area thanks

  3. I can’t grow cilantro in warm weather , wonder how they do it in India because they have cilantro year round

  4. Thank you for telling us how some of the foods taste, best place to plant, and when to plant. Your little tips are wonderful, I feel as if you are giving them to beginner gardeners like me.

  5. A couple of lettuce variety that did better than other varieties for me last winter was Merlot and Prizehead. I'm trying Red Sails and New Red Fire for the first time this season.

  6. I'm still working out the timing for our leeks up here in Oregon. Last year I planted out some little ones in October, which grew to probably the size of a mature bunching onion, then basically halted for the winter. Come spring, every single one of them sent out scapes to go to seed. We cooked what we could scavenge, but I would have much preferred a fully mature leek instead! So basically we either need to plant them out much earlier so they can grow to maturity before winter, or try to put out baby plants a week or two before our frosts start coming in and hope they don't go to seed again. Thankfully I did just harvest a bunch of fresh seed from our big leeks that I left overwinter last year, so we'll have plenty to try out both methods, and maybe they'll have a little adaptation to the winter they experienced!

  7. I've tried most of these and they didn't grow. The worst was carrots, turnips and radishes. Oh I got great growth of greens, but only the tiniest of roots. Plenty of carrot that were ALL an inch or less. The turnips and radishes, were tiny as well, but big greens. Yes the soil had plenty of fertilizer,(mix of manure, compost and some other items to keep the soil good), even was in new soil in deep containers to give them room to grow. Trying it again this year.

  8. Kinda on a different note but have u tried Honey Babe dwarf peach? I have the Bonanza dwarf peach but would like a another different variety thats dwarf

  9. 7:52 One of the best ways to get bunching onions in your garden is to buy them at the supermarket when you need them for a recipe. Use the green part and plant the bulb/root in the garden. They will regrew from the white bulb.

  10. yay dale! Good stuff! I have about half of those going in my garden zone 7a. I build a cover with bamboo and 6mil plastic.

  11. This pick is not as universal as the crops you mention in the video (which will be great options almost anywhere in the continental US), but for those in very warm zones (probably 9+) peas are also a good fall planting option. Just North of Tampa here in 9B, I start successions of peas in fall and keep them going through winter and into Spring until the temps get too hot around mid-late April. I've never had my peas take damage even at 27F, but that may be because in my area on the rare instances it gets that cold, it doesn't stay that cold for more than a couple hours in the early morning.

  12. My cilantro always bolts so quickly in summer that I can hardly accumulate any to dry. I never tried in the fall. Can't wait to get some seeds in the ground. I'm in 7a.

  13. Again, very informative.
    Going to try arugula and cilantro this year, maybe some of that red lettuce.
    I am awful at root veggies, even radishes! It should not even be a thing! LOL

  14. When do you dig up your peppers and bring them in to overwinter? I’m in zone 8b and it’s warm enough that they can still produce, but cool enough I want the space cleared up for fall crops.

  15. My sister planted some green onion seeds in a random bin at the beginning of the year, but we forgot about them. There's none growing where they were sown, but there's green onions popping up in basically all my raised beds in random places. A bunch a growing between carrots, lettuce, and beets, but they don't seem to be much of a problem so I have just let them go and will hopefully learn how to use them in the kitchen. I'm never sure how big they should be when harvesting, so I'm just letting them grow. Hopefully they're not compromising the carrots and other things they're mixed in with….

  16. Im a little colder than you in central Ohio, but im giving some of these a try, currently have onions, kale, and some broccoli doing nicely. Ty

  17. I’m growing a few tomatoes for the first time on your recommendation in 2025. Have you grown the Jersey Devil paste tomato? If so how did it do for you?

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