Fall Planting
Strangely enough, this is a busy time for planting, and you’d be hard pressed to recognize we’re approaching the end, and not the beginning of the growing season.
What to plant in September?
Once the weather cools, thus reducing transplant stress, divide and move spring blooming perennials like peonies, hellebores, bleeding hearts, cranesbills and coral bells. Summer perennials can be divided at this time too, if they finished their blooming season.
Cold weather crops like spinach, chard, turnips, carrots, peas, radishes, lettuce and kale are sown early in the fall.
The mild September weather is perfect for starting perennials from cuttings. The plants’ hormone levels are high and there is still enough sunshine and warmth to prompt them into developing a healthy root system which will get established over the winter. Roses, salvias, flowering quince, hydrangeas, butterfly bush, azaleas, rosemary and lavender can be started from cuttings now. For roses, I prefer the glass jar method.
Finally, sow cold weather annual, biennial and perennial flower seeds, to give them a head start in spring.




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