Welcome to the WCS fundraising site. If you are NOT looking to purchase as part of a fundraiser, please click here to visit westcoastseeds.com
Welcome to the WCS fundraising site. If you are NOT looking to purchase as part of a fundraiser, please click here to visit westcoastseeds.com
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Time to Plant Legumes

category: Articles and Instructions category: Garden Resources category: Winter Gardening Cover-crops fall-planting green-manure legumes nitrogen-fix what-to-plant-now winter-gardening

It’s September, and much of the garden has been put to bed. Heat loving summer crops have all but withered: Sunflower heads have been cut for drying, tomatoes have been picked green and brought indoors, and pumpkins sit bright and orange while the rest of the plants have succumbed to mildew and the season’s end.

Now is the time to plant legumes as cover crops, though. Members of the pea and bean family germinate well in the cooler soil of autumn. Plants like clover, fava beans, vetch, and winter field peas are perfectly cold hardy, and will continue growing (slowly), well into winter, and often into the following spring. As they grow, they work with naturally occurring soil bacteria to draw nitrogen from the atmosphere and fix it in nodes along their roots. So much nitrogen is accumulate in the soil that any crop planted in the same spot the following spring will have a natural advantage, and accelerated foliar growth.

So if there is a patch of soil in your garden that would otherwise sit empty until next spring, consider planting one of the following useful cover crops to take advantage of this organic growing method.

Crimson Clover – Hardy to Zone 6: -23°C (-10F). Tilled plants break down in just ten days, ready for spring planting.

White Dutch Clover – Hardy to Zone 4: -34°C (-30°F). Allow two weeks for this clover to break down prior to planting.

Hairy Vetch – Hardy to Zone 4: -34°C (-30°F). Its deep roots help to break up compacted soil as it fixes nitrogen for spring planting.

Fava Beans – Hardy to Zone 7: -17°C (0°F). Plant in the heaviest of soils, and plant as late as November on the coast. This plant ignores winter and chugs along producing lots of carbon-rich foliage to compost, and fixing nitrogen as it grows. In the spring, just cut the plants down at ground level and lay them as a mulch over spring beds.

Winter Field Peas – Hardy to Zone 6: -23°C (-10°F). Easy plant, easy to till under the following spring. Your soil will thank you for it.

These legumes, and the nitrogen-fixing function they perform, benefit from being treated with a seed inoculant. It’s not critical, but it will speed up and improve nitrogen fixation. Our Crimson Clover seeds are already inoculated, so do not require any further treatment.


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