In midsummer you can harvest your own vegetables in abundance. The free areas can be used well for planting late vegetables. In this article you will find out which varieties are particularly suitable due to their rapid growth.

Cabbage can also be planted in midsummer

cabbage

  • will be traditional Chinese cabbage Sow at the end of July as a follow-up crop. Alternatively, you can buy small seedlings from the nursery and transplant them into the bed in August.
  • Pak choi is becoming increasingly popular in the kitchen. Sown at the beginning of August, the tender heads are already ready to harvest at the end of September.
  • Kale-Lovers cultivate tender-leaved varieties as babyleaf vegetables. Sow the cabbage quite densely in rows 15 centimeters apart. You can harvest the young leaves continuously and enjoy them raw in a salad or briefly steamed.

fennel

If you prefer fennel in pots on the terrace, you can transplant the vegetables into the bed as a follow-up crop until mid-August. Here it grows quickly and is mature by the beginning of October at the latest.

radish

The tasty tubers even tolerate light frost. Thinly sown in rows, the plants are ready to harvest after just seven to eight weeks.

lettuce and spinach

  • spinach for the autumn harvest you can sow until the beginning of September. Since the weather conditions in autumn are somewhat wetter, you should use mildew-resistant late varieties.
  • endive saladt is a classic fall salad. You can get pre-grown plants from the nursery and bring them into the bed as after-culture.
  • Now the time for the popular begins Lamb's lettuce. Sown in mid to late August, you can harvest as early as September.
  • for chard it's never too late Sow this in August, cut the leaves with the brightly colored stems as babyleaf. Briefly steamed, it is an extremely aromatic and healthy treat. If you give the Swiss chard winter protection in late autumn, it survives the cold well and can even be cultivated as a biennial.
  • winter purslane is absolutely undemanding. Like winter cress and wild rocket, it only germinates well at low temperatures.

Pay attention to the crop rotation

When reseeding, you should not ignore the crop rotation. Heavy eaters should now be followed by weak or medium eaters. Also, avoid vegetables of the same plant family in the subsequent crop.

tips

You can even grow beetroot in August. Simply sow varieties such as the "Rote Kugel" a little more densely and harvest the tender tubers when they have just reached the size of a table tennis ball.

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