all seasons

Veggie Garden Tips for every Season

Early season mustard greens add vitamins to your meals.

Mid TO LATE April

In April, when the soil is workable and there is no snow in your garden, you can sow peas outdoors. If your garden isn’t ready yet, seed them indoors in a tray of soil and eat the shoots once they’re a few inches tall. You can even try transplanting them outdoors once your garden beds are prepared. Peas, like all legumes, don’t like their roots disturbed, so don’t try to separate them out individually but instead plant them as a mat and harvest them for shoots. Some people successfully start their snow, snap and shelling peas indoors in fiber pots and transplant them outside when they’re a couple inches tall without taking them out of the pot. We recommend you put up a trellis for the peas right away before the garden tempo picks up and you are too busy to do it.

Hardy mustard greens such as the Zesty Mix we grow in little pots are a great way to get a jump on the season. They can be planted in little clumps in garden soil that is dry and thawed (a raised bed for example) and protected with row cover. They can be eaten small as leaves in a salad, or they can be planted in separate clumps that get large for steaming or braising. Those little pots of Zesty Mix are the best value because they are so versatile and mulit-purpose.

Onions and leeks don’t mind the cold, and it is important to get them in as early as possible. We have a whole blog post dedicated to growing onions, take a look at it here.

While you’re waiting for the temperatures to warm up, a good way to satisfy our gardening itch - instead of planting out tender crops too early and watching them perish in a late frost - is to set up our garden instead: Pull out any overwintered weeds, clean up last season’s debris, build a raised bed, put up a trellis, spread a layer of compost, make a succession planting plan, or start some seeds indoors.

May

This is the time to plant all cold season crops: radicchio, lettuce, broccoli, cabbages, beets, fennel, lettuce, kohlrabi, chard…

Potatoes can be planted 2-4 weeks before the last expected frost, when the soil has warmed up to at least 50F. Here in the Northeast this is typically in the month of May. Find our varieties for 2025 here.

late may / early june

After the last chance of a frost has passed (in Vermont, traditionally this is around Memorial Day), it is safe to plant all heat loving vegetables, what we call hot crops: tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, tomatillos, husk cherries. Cucumbers, zucchini, and all types of squashes can be planted as well.

Make sure you harden them off properly before putting them in the ground. Especially if you kept starts under grow lights, they will need to adjust to the outdoor world over the course of several days. Place them outdoors in the shade, protected from wind, during the day time and take them back inside for the night. Repeat this for several days, gradually increasing their exposure to sunlight and the elements, before planting them in the ground.

Peppers come in so many different flavors, heat levels, and colors.

June

Weed your onions and leeks. Remember to fertilize them every 2-3 weeks with a handful of Compost Plus or a balanced liquid fertilizer like fish emulsion.

After your first round is harvested, you can replant more radicchio, lettuce, arugula, and beets.

Late June is not too late to get your garden going: Plant a tomato, plant a zucchini, sow green beans, put some cut flowers in the ground! If you’re working with a patio garden, you can always add more pots: Mediterranean herbs like rosemary, thyme and lavender are especially well suited for sunny locations.

Here are some plants you can direct sow outdoors this time of year:

  • cilantro, dill

  • green beans

  • edamame

  • heat tolerant mustard greens like Yukina Savoy, Mizuna, Wasabina and Ruby Streaks

  • carrots, beets and radishes

  • bolt resistant lettuce varieties like ‘Purple Fusion’

  • cukes and summer squashes

Vegetables and herbs that you can plant as starts in the summertime:

  • All the herbs. For example basil, oregano, parsley and anise hyssop.

  • cukes and summer squashes

  • lettuce

  • fennel

  • chicories

  • kohlrabi

  • chard and kale

  • beets

Early Summer

Any spots in your veggie garden that have freed up from harvested lettuce, garlic, spinach or peas can be replanted with chicories, herbs or annual flowers.
To still get a good harvest, now is your best chance to direct seed the following vegetables:

  • summer squash like Patty Pan or zucchini

  • carrots

  • green beans

  • flowering herbs like calendula and borage

If you would like cilantro at the same time as tomatoes for salsa, now is the time to either transplant it or direct seed it. Scallions too.

It is likely time to harvest onions, and the best way to check is to see if the plants have flopped over and the skins have started to form on the bulbs. Onions need to cure before going into storage, and this is usually best accomplished by laying them out in a dark, dry, and airy space for a couple of weeks so that the green tops can dry and the skins can fully form. Sweet onions such as Ailsa Craig, Walla Walla, and Sierra Blanca should go in the fridge. They don’t store well.

If you would like peppers to ripen from green to red (or orange / yellow if that is the variety you have), it is recommended to pick one or two at the green stage. This will help the others ripen to their mature color.

A tomato trellis in Red Wagon’s display veggie garden.

Mid TO LATE Summer

During the heat of summer, here are some ways to take the stress off your plants:

  • water early in the day.

  • if you are planting some new plants, do after 4 pm so that they have the cooler night ahead of them as they adjust to life in the ground. Water well when planting.

  • fertilize with Compost Plus or with a liquid fish / seaweed fertilizer. It will help plants cope with the heat stress.

  • most importantly, we hope you keep yourself cool with dips in the lake or river.

If you are growing leeks, mid summer is a good time to hill soil around their base so that they form more of a tender white part.

It might be tempting to stop weeding as summer winds down, but this is when weeds are setting seed, so you should probably focus a little extra on taking out the weeds that are flowering. Otherwise, they’ll have plenty of time to leave you with thousands of weed seeds for years to come. Preventing weeds from flowering and setting seeds will save countless hours in the future.

If you are going away for a long weekend or vacation in summer: In just a few minutes, you can get your garden vacation ready by harvesting a few things, watering all the containers and putting the most delicate potted plants in the shade while you are away. All smaller pots can go on a tray partially filled with water so they look not so dead when you get back.

Is it time to rip out the old zucchini plants and cucumbers? Maybe you have a generation of beans that have gone by? Don’t let empty garden space go to waste, and take time to pop in radicchio, escarole, broccoli, or other fall greens. Turnips and rutabagas can be seeded directly outdoors in mid summer for a late fall harvest.

Late summer veggie garden: We love to add flowers to attract pollinators, beneficials, and to satisfy our sense of beauty.

FALL

Once the temperatures cool down, most hot crops will slow or stall their production and ripening process. You can clip the tips off of tomato plants in late summer to encourage them to send energy into ripening fruit instead of growing taller, or you can simply harvest your green tomatoes. Either turn them into a delicious green tomato salsa or let them ripen on the kitchen counter and use them for sauce.

Any plants that are diseased or otherwise unhappy should be pulled and added to your compost pile. Don’t let veggie plant debris - especially tomatoes - overwinter in your garden, you could accidentally be harboring unwanted pests and diseases that will flourish next spring.

Some plants can be left standing though, if you want them to reseed or offer the seeds as food to the birds. Examples include dill, cilantro, or tulsi seed heads and any perennial plants you might have in your veggie garden, like asparagus, anise hyssop, lovage or rhubarb.

WINTER

This is the time for us and our gardens to rest, but there is never a season when we can’t be gardening. We can plan and dream, make plant lists and order seeds. It is also a wonderful practice to review our garden notes and re-evaluate what went well, what we’d like to improve, and where we feel like experimenting. And then there are houseplants…

Red Wagon’s cold frames and greenhouses at rest.

Happy gardening!

This blog post was written by Kat Consler and Julie Rubaud.

Planters for all seasons

An early Spring planter with lamium, viola, stock and alyssum.

SPRING

OUR FAVORITE FROST HARDY ANNUAL FLOWERS

Pansies and violas: The obvious first choice for springtime color, they withstand a frost or a snowstorm with ease. With their wide range of colors, patterns and sizes, they match any color palette - and they smell so good! Edible flowers.

Nemesia: Snapdragon-like flowers float above deep green foliage. You’ll need to lean in, but it’s worth sniffing these blooms: Their scent is amazing.

Alyssum: Lovely low growing plant with fluffy white or purple flowers who’s smell is sweet as honey.

Lobelia: Shades of true blue make this plant special. They are a great ground cover or filler for springtime planters.

Lobularia: Their intoxicating scent will win your heart instantly. They mix well with pansies or shine on their own, spilling over the edges of a hanging basket.

Stock: This cold loving cut flower blooms for weeks while exuding a wonderful perfume.

Osteospermum: Not quite as cold hardy as the other plants, but still well able to tolerate temperatures in the 30ies. Cute daisy like flowers in many shades of the rainbow.

Argyranthemum: Similar cold hardiness as Osteos. Fine foliage with multi-stemmed daisy like flowers in pinks, yellows and white. If kept deadheaded, they will bloom all the way through fall.

Cold Hardy Herbs and Vegetables that we love to mix in for texture, color and flavor:

  • Chervil

  • Curly and Flat Parsley

  • Cilantro

  • Dill

  • Sorrel

  • Mustard Greens like Tokyo Bekana and Ruby Streaks

A sun loving summer basket filled with purple petunias, lobelia, and verbena.

EARLY SUMMER

A SEASON FOR ALL COLORS

Once all chance of frost has passed, the palette of flowers widens: Geraniums, Begonias, Zinnias, Bidens, Petunias, Verbena, Lantana, Angelonia, Marigolds, Ageratum and so many more are now safe to grow outside.

Especially beloved by bees and hummingbirds are Agastache, Salvias, and Cuphea.

Options for foliage plants to create a green (or multicolored) backdrop range from trailing Plectranthus, Dichondra, and Sweet Potato Vine, to bushy Eucalyptus, Coleus, and Iresine, all the way to spiky upright Cordyline, and ornamental grasses.

Great choices for planters in part shade: Begonias, Coleus, Browallia, Impatiens, and Torenia.

MID SUMMER

TIME FOR A REDO

By July most planters that were created earlier in the year are starting to fade and can benefit from a makeover. Cool weather plants just don’t enjoy the heat, but you don’t need to pull them out. You can keep them tucked away in a shady spot, idly awaiting their time to shine again later in Fall. Oftentimes pansies, violas, stock and other cool weather flowers will stay alive through the heat of summer if they are kept in the shade of other plants and they will send out new flowers once the weather cools later in the season.

Make sure to fertilize your planters with a handful of compost or a dose of liquid fertilizer at least every two weeks. Gently trim back plants that look overgrown by cutting a few branches by a third or to half their length. Remove dead leaves and flowerheads to prevent diseases from spreading.

Excellent choices for their heat tolerance: Chrysocephalum, Gazania, Portulaca, and any silver leaved foliage plants.

LATE SUMMER INTO FALL

A SECOND CHANCE FOR COOL LOVING PLANTS

Cannas, ornamental grasses, Rudbeckia hirta, begonias, fuchsia and foliage plants are a great way to create a colorful look that will transition from high summer into early fall. We love to use perennials in our summer pots too. Heuchera, hosta, and anemone are all fun plants for adding color and texture and they transition well into the garden after serving dutifully in your planters.

Fall color provided by rudbeckia.

You can find our full annual flower plant list here.

This blog post was written by Julie Rubaud and Kat Consler.