Planting Garlic in the Fall
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Planting garlic in the fall is the last garden chores of the season. A small amount of preparation at planting time will give you an abundant garlic harvest without much effort.
Garlic is one of the easiest crops you can grow in your garden. It is a long season crop with a unique growing pattern compared to other garden crops. Garlic is planted in fall in order to give it a head start and enough time to produce a larger bulb.
Also read 7 Tips to Growing Great Garlic
How to Plant Garlic in the Fall
Planting garlic in the fall allows the roots to begin growing. When winter arrives and the ground freezes, the plants go dormant. Once the soil warms up in the spring, the garlic will start growing again right where it left off.
Prepare Your Growing Bed
Garlic thrives in full sun and loose soil. Choose a garden bed that has not grown anything in the onion family in the past two years and one that receives an average of at least six hours of sunlight each day. Remove weeds and spread some slow-release organic fertilizer according to the package direction. Add about 2-inches of finished compost and work it in the top 4-6 inches of soil.
Plot out your growing bed 4-6 inches in all directions. Dig your holes about 4-inches deep. If you are using the square foot gardening method, plot 6 cloves per square.
Divide Your Garlic Seed
When you purchase garlic seed, you are actually getting heads of garlic. Garlic is grown from individual cloves. Each clove will grow into a bulb of garlic.
Separate your cloves right before planting. Sort out your largest and healthiest looking cloves for planting. If you plant the largest cloves, you will grow larger heads of garlic for next year. Save the smaller and damaged cloves for cooking.
Plant Your Garlic Cloves
Plant a garlic clove into each hole, with the flat side down and the pointy end up. Cover and firm the soil.
Mulch Your Garlic Bed
Water the garlic bed well after planting and cover with a light layer of mulch, such as straw or shredded leaves. Aim for about 2-3 inches of mulch to keep the weeds down until the ground freezes.
After the ground freezes, add another layer of 2-3 inches of mulch to insulate the soil. This helps prevent the garlic roots from being heaved out of the ground by alternate freezing and thawing.
Once the soil warms in spring, you will see green garlic shoots growing through the mulch. If you used an all-purpose organic fertilizer at planting time, your garlic is off to a great start. Water the garlic bed during dry spells when the soil feels dry an inch beneath the surface. Feed with organic fish emulsion fertilizer if the foliage shows signs of stress (yellow tips). Follow the directions on the bottle.
If you planted hardneck garlic, you will have an opportunity to harvest garlic scapes a few weeks before the garlic bulb is finished growing. These tender, mildly garlic flavored shoots are delicious.
You May Also Like:
- 7 Tips to Prepare Your Vegetable Garden for Winter
- How to Harvest Garlic Scapes
- 10 Ways to Use Garlic Scapes
- How to Harvest, Cure, and Store Garlic for Winter
- How to Plant Garlic in Spring
Good planning is key to a successful vegetable garden
Whether you are new to growing your own food or have been growing a vegetable garden for years, you will benefit from some planning each year. You will find everything you need to organize and plan your vegetable garden in my PDF eBook, Grow a Good Life Guide to Planning Your Vegetable Garden.
Just planted my garlic. I put 2 to 3 inches of straw on top since last year I lost most of my garlic due to the cold winter.
Garlic is by far my favorite fall plant. Roasted garlic is delicious (especially home grown). Thanks for sharing at the HomeAcre hop – feel free to stop by Pint Size Farm or one of the other hosts to submit another this week!
Hi,
Just a note to let you know that I choose your post as one of my features on this weeks Real Food Fridays blog hop that goes live tomorrow @ 7pm EST. Thanks for sharing and being part of Real Food Fridays!
Your garlic looks great and thanks for sharing the vivid pictures. Very informative and helpful post. Thanks for sharing on Real Food Fridays. Pinned & twitted.
I use so much garlic. I’d love to grow my own. I’ll bet I could do this in a pot…
Miki, Yes, you can grow garlic in a pot! I hope you give it a try.
I wonder if I have time to do this before the baby comes! I would love to have fresh garlic next year!
Great post on planting garlic! Saw you on tuesday with a twist, love if you share this on Fabulous Friday Party. thanks Maria
http://www.simplenaturedecorblog.com/fabulous-friday-partyfall-features/
I have some buckwheat decomposing my garlic bed right now. We’re still a couple of weeks out from planting. How wonderful to be able to grow enough to last all year, that’s always my goal but I’ve never made it. Maybe this year. Thanks for sharing your technique with us at Simple Lives Thursday; hope to see you again this week.
Oh, I could actually do this in my tiny city plot! I am already tasting fresh garlic bread mmm!
Your garlic looks fantastic! I plant around 50 bulbs a year, which I think is plenty for a family of three. Garlic has to be one of my favorite things to plant because you can essentially forget about them until it’s time to cut the scapes.