@California Garden TV

California Garden TV: 10 Vegetables to plant in September? IN ANY CLIMATE!



In this video I’ll show you what crops you can still grow in your organic vegetable garden in September or early fall. I’m talking about cool season crops for almost any climate.

RELATED VIDEOS
How to Grow Broccoli: https://youtu.be/ov3QfUGoArg
How to Grow Garlic in Containers or Raised Beds: https://youtu.be/J58N1CJxoWg?si=PZHtnrNLHTGx8iy4
How to Grow Peas: https://youtu.be/7pGCdH3x9hY?si=kRk_yAx3w6s1f-FX
How to Grow Lettuce: https://youtu.be/EgTasbpQJLE?si=Pi1D5S-blqpoEEOR

TIMESTAMPS
Garlic: 01:02
Spinach: 01:30
Radishes: 01:52
Asian Greens: 02:03
Peas & Pea Shoots: 02:13
Bunching/Salad/ Green Onions: 02:44
Cilantro: 03:11
Chives: 03:47
Leaf Lettuce: 04:17
Bonus: Brassicas; Broccoli, Cabbage, Brussels Sprouts: 04:50

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Hey Guys, I’m Brian from Next Level Gardening

Welcome to our online community! A place to be educated, inspired and hopefully entertained at the same time! A place where you can learn to grow your own food and become a better organic gardener. At the same time, a place to grow the beauty around you and stretch that imagination (that sometimes lies dormant, deep inside) through gardening.

I’m so glad you’re here!

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32 Comments

  1. already planted peas, lettuce and bush beans. My second planting of tomatoes are now developing fruit. Great Video!

  2. Jacksonville FL Dec 24th is our frost date. I have bunching onions all year round. Instead of cilantro, I use culantro. It tastes just like cilantro but I find it easier to grow, and it can be used in soups without loosing it's flavor.

  3. Arizona is a totally different ball game . I usually seed in September but this year we still have 114 degree ! Must wait .

  4. Blah! 😝 I hate, hate, hate cilantro! It doesn't taste soapy to me, just tastes nasty. If someone puts it in my food, I can't even pick it out, because the flavor permeates the rest of the food. Thanks for the video though Brian. 😊

  5. Love cilantro! What is salsa without it? Also eating cilantro aids in removing heavy (toxic) metals from the body.

  6. My first frost is October 1… I suppose I don't have time for much but I just planted some radishes today and I think they'll be OK! I also planted some lettuce about a week ago.

  7. Here in greater SanFran (Zone 9) … (said) frost date 12/10 and frost-free (2/1) … I really doubt this is a truth – because we barely (and rarely !!!) get down to 35-39 (40s with maybe some wind chill). "Frost temperature" is considered frost on the surface at 32F. We have neighborhood apples, figs, avocados, cherries, plums, olives, oranges, lemons, limes, loquat, kumquat, … all year long without issues – some places 100+ years long. So there really is no valid truth that greater SanFran (other than potential northern Marin county) would ever see frosts. In my 18+ years here, never seen frost … fog, rain, wind, glaring heat, yes, … frost no.

    So know your grow zone, but also the real seasonal temps of your area. Here we could plant anything – onions, garlic, chives, shallots, scallions, radish, daikon radish, beets, carrots, parsnips, turnips, rutabagas, broccoli, broccolini/chinese rabe, cauliflower, jicama, potatoes, sweet potatoes, yams, cabbage, kale, collards, tree kale, tree collards, tree lettuce, … of course, they will need warm soil to warm up and then sprout, while the hardy brassicas will fluorish beyond expectations. In our local raised-bed community food garden, people have grown (to my astonishment) 6+ foot broccoli, cauliflower, beets that looked like tree burls (!), so a grow zone or frost date for (coastal) areas is not always accurate. Roots, tubers, bulbs, brassica (sulfur) species, all growing fine – without greater care and fertilization.

  8. I just paid $1.18 for a bunch of cilantro at the store. I love cilantro and this is the most I've ever paid for it. It's usually around .68 Cents/bunch. What's going on with cilantro?!

  9. Excellent information. Can you consider doing a short video that shows when it's time to get rid of a crop to make way for the next? Not the mechanics, but how do you know when to stop waiting for the last couple of cucumbers and rip them out so the next crop has a chance? It's a tough call. Or maybe not. Thanks, Brian.

  10. Planted turnips, squash, green beans, cucumbers, carrits, sugar snap peas, cabbage, & cilantro. Planning to plant onions and garlic soon.

  11. So…do you EAT all this stuff???? Besides garlic, obviously….other than that I don’t eat Any of that stuff. Especially cilantro. Yuk!!

  12. I am in the valley here is CA zone 9b. Our first frost is around November 20th. I love watching your videos as I am new to large gardening. I have always done the typical tomatoes, squash and zucchini but have ventured out this year. Defiantly have had some successes and failures. Looking forward to planting my September crop.

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