Tips For a Fabulous Fall Garden

Here's how to extend your garden season beyond just spring and summer.

Smiling family and friends sitting at table for social gathering
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A fall garden can be a great and bounteous place—not a space that makes us mourn for the glory days of summer but somewhere that allows us to revel in the beauty and abundance of the season.

Fall is definitely my favorite time of the year, and perhaps the time of year when I enjoy and appreciate my own garden most of all.

Unfortunately, many gardeners seem to focus on summer so much that the garden can fade during the fall and not live up to its full potential at this time of the year.

So, to help gardeners make sure they have gardens that bloom and create abundance right through to the first frosts and beyond, here are some tips for a fabulous fall garden.

Continue to Sow & Grow Annual Crops in Fall

If you live in a warmer climate zone, you will no doubt be able to grow annual crops outdoors year-round. You may already sow and grow cool-season crops for winter in the fall.

Even in cooler and more northern gardens, however, it is still possible to sow and grow throughout the year if you invest in an undercover growing area or grow indoors.

When you switch from summer growing to year-round cultivation, you will be amazed by how much more you are able to grow and by the abundance of your yields.

By sowing and growing the right crops at the right times throughout the year, your garden can be incredibly productive right up to and even beyond the first frosts.

Embrace Perennials for Food Production

Girl picking apples from tree
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As well as growing annual crops for food production, a successful fall garden also shows very clearly why it can be such a good idea to embrace perennial food production.

A forest garden, or even a single fruit tree and guild, can be particularly beautiful and productive in the fall. This is the time when a number of fruit trees and berry bushes will be producing their yields. This is also a time when you may be harvesting seeds from other plants within the space, as well as propagating plants in other ways.

Not only will having perennial food-producing plants in your garden—trees, shrubs, and herbaceous perennials—allow you to harvest abundant yields from a fall garden, they can also often look wonderful and attract plenty of wildlife for you to watch and enjoy at this time of the year.

Choose Native Plants for a Diverse Fall Garden

Whether for food production, for ornamental spaces, or both, it is always a good idea to look first at native plants. Plants that are native to your area should always make up a high proportion of the plants that you grow.

Selecting plenty of native plants that bloom or provide other interest in the fall can help you to boost biodiversity, and, of course, they look lovely and right at home. Native plant databases for your area can become shopping lists for a diverse fall garden.

Use and Value Fall Leaves

Of course, some of the useful plants for a fall garden are those that have colorful foliage. When deciduous trees drop their leaves later in the season, creating a fabulous fall garden means making the most of those fallen leaves as a resource to keep your garden looking good and growing strong.

To make the most of fall leaves, you can use them as mulch to protect the soil and overwintering plants (like garlic, for example), make leaf mold to enrich the soil and/or fill planters or containers, or perhaps even take on some fun arts and crafts projects to enjoy their colors and shapes inside your home.

Add Garden Features for Year-Round Enjoyment

Fireside Relaxation
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Making a fabulous fall garden is mostly about the plants that you choose to grow and the ways in which you choose to garden. But gardens should not be entirely about hard work, and you can also take steps to ensure you can fully enjoy the space—not just in summer but also in cooler seasons.

Covered seating areas, garden buildings, outdoor heat sources (like fire pits or outdoor fireplaces, for example), and perhaps outdoor lighting can help you enjoy your garden just as much in the fall as you do in the summer.