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Frosted field grasses
blush softly in rosy hues
at winter’s sunrise.




 

 

Frosted field grasses
blush softly in rosy hues
at winter’s sunrise.




 
 Gardening with Carol
 From Other Gardeners
 

Welcome to the wonders of growing and harvesting nutritious vegetables from your garden October to May.

Yes, you can pick fresh vegetables during the cold months! Grown during warm months, the
How to Grow Winter-harvest Vegetables 2011 Calendar
“Hi Carol,
Thanks so much for sending my copy of your wonderful new calendar. I've had it on the top of my reading pile next to my fireside rocker since it arrived and love picking it up to study bit by important bit. The content is well-chosen and much easier to read this year. By using a calendar as a teaching aid, you've given us one of the key dimensions of growing food -- the never-ending wave of time that flows through our gardens.
- Nancy D.”
gardener has only to harvest during cold months.
On our site you will find:
  • Information about how to grow winter-harvest vegetables
  • Access to instruction and consultation
  • A community of growers eager to learn, suggest, and share
  • Links to resources and networks
Anyone can grow winter-harvest vegetables. Given the right conditions and varieties, and even with minimum space, a gardener can grow a surprising selection. Sweet, tasty, and nutritious, these vegetables are winter-hardy and resilient. The pleasure and satisfaction of harvesting a bowl of fresh vegetables on a chilly winter day is matched only by the ease of the winter-harvest garden: no weeding, no watering, and no pest control for seven long months – just taste treats bursting with vitality.

A warm welcome to you. Enjoy!

Dinner harvested from under January snow

Welcome to the wonders of growing and harvesting nutritious vegetables from your garden October to May.

Yes, you can pick fresh vegetables during the cold months! Grown during warm months, the
How to Grow Winter-harvest Vegetables 2011 Calendar
“Hi Carol,
Thanks so much for sending my copy of your wonderful new calendar. I've had it on the top of my reading pile next to my fireside rocker since it arrived and love picking it up to study bit by important bit. The content is well-chosen and much easier to read this year. By using a calendar as a teaching aid, you've given us one of the key dimensions of growing food -- the never-ending wave of time that flows through our gardens.
- Nancy D.”
gardener has only to harvest during cold months.
On our site you will find:
  • Information about how to grow winter-harvest vegetables
  • Access to instruction and consultation
  • A community of growers eager to learn, suggest, and share
  • Links to resources and networks
Anyone can grow winter-harvest vegetables. Given the right conditions and varieties, and even with minimum space, a gardener can grow a surprising selection. Sweet, tasty, and nutritious, these vegetables are winter-hardy and resilient. The pleasure and satisfaction of harvesting a bowl of fresh vegetables on a chilly winter day is matched only by the ease of the winter-harvest garden: no weeding, no watering, and no pest control for seven long months – just taste treats bursting with vitality.

A warm welcome to you. Enjoy!

Dinner harvested from under January snow


The last of the fall/winter carrots and beets harvested April 19th.
The last of the fall/winter carrots and beets harvested April 19th.
Purple Sprouting Broccoli, April 19th. Can't eat it fast enough!
Purple Sprouting Broccoli, April 19th. Can't eat it fast enough!
Perpetual Spinach fed us fall, winter, spring.
Perpetual Spinach fed us fall, winter, spring.

The last of the fall/winter carrots and beets harvested April 19th.
The last of the fall/winter carrots and beets harvested April 19th.
Purple Sprouting Broccoli, April 19th. Can't eat it fast enough!
Purple Sprouting Broccoli, April 19th. Can't eat it fast enough!
Perpetual Spinach fed us fall, winter, spring.
Perpetual Spinach fed us fall, winter, spring.
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