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Fall gardening tips: Leave leaves, bury bulbs, get garlic in the ground

WASHINGTON 鈥 Afternoons spent biting into fresh-from-the-vine tomatoes and collecting buckets of basil from the backyard are now a distant memory.

Summer’s bounty is gone, and the cold-weather months are officially here.

But just because frost is in the forecast doesn鈥檛 mean you need to abandon the garden. Kathy Jentz, editor and publisher of , said fall is a great time to plan and plant for spring. Here are her top tips for gardening in the off season:

fresh herbs preparation to be dried top view on wooden background
Savor the last of summer If a few summer herbs are still hanging around, now is the time to rip them out of the ground and hang them to dry. Store them properly and use them to cook with throughout the winter. Have a few tomatoes that are still going strong? Pull out the entire plant from the roots and hang it upside down in a cellar or shed. Jentz said the tomatoes will continue to ripen on the vine. (Getty Images)
Fresh radish in garden
Cold-weather edibles By November, it鈥檚 a little late to plant fall greens, but if you鈥檙e dying to get your hands dirty, there are a few veggies you can start this time of year, including radishes. Jentz said from seed to salad, radishes are incredibly fast and only take about 30 to 45 days, as long as the region doesn鈥檛 experience a deep freeze before they are ready. The same goes for other root vegetables, such as turnips and beets. (Getty Images)
Mid-Atlantic gardeners can plant carrots this time of year, since the cold weather only makes them taste better. (Getty Images)
Crank out some carrots Mid-Atlantic gardeners can plant carrots this time of year, since the cold weather only makes them taste better. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l be forming underground all winter long, and then you can just go out and dig them in January and they鈥檙e actually a little sweeter at that point because the frost and freeze makes the sugars rise,鈥 Jentz said. (Getty Images)
Senior woman planting garlic in the vegetable garden
Get garlic in the ground Garlic is also good to go in the ground in late fall. Jentz recommends breaking up a head of garlic and planting each clove, pointy side up, in a hole that鈥檚 a couple of inches deep in a spot that receives good sunlight. By May, garlic scapes will pop up and lend a fresh flavor to pastas, pestos and pizzas. By early July, each clove will have formed into its own head of garlic. 鈥淎nd then you just dry them in a warm, dry space for a couple of weeks and you have your cured garlic heads. It鈥檚 like magic,鈥 Jentz said. Just be sure to give the garlic its space: It doesn鈥檛 like anything crowding the root zone. 鈥淪o just know that what you鈥檙e planting now in mid-fall is going to go through July, and you wouldn鈥檛 be able to interplant with tomatoes or anything else. So you鈥檙e sacrificing that space, but it鈥檚 such an easy crop and it鈥檚 pretty much set-it-and-forget-it, so I don鈥檛 see why anybody with a sunny spot wouldn鈥檛 try it,鈥 Jentz said. (Getty Images)
Planting flower bulbs (tulip) in the garden in autumn
Bury the bulbs Now through December is the window to start on spring-blooming bulbs. Jentz suggests going to your local garden center and touching the bulbs before making your purchase. The best ones are firm, not mushy. When you go to plant them, the general rule-of-thumb is pointy side up in a hole that鈥檚 twice the height of the bulb. And Jentz has a timesaving trick: 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 need to plant each in its own little hole,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou can dig out a 2-foot by 4-foot section, 6 inches deep or so, and then put an odd number of bulbs in. The bottom layer might be tulips or daffodils, then cover that with a bit of soil, and then do a second layer of the minor bulbs, which are the small ones like crocus and muscari, and then cover that.鈥 This creates a more visually appealing garden, come spring. (Getty Images)
Autumn, Lawn, Public Park, Formal Garden, Sunset
Leave a mess You may be tempted to clean your garden for the winter months, but Jentz said being a 鈥渕essy gardener鈥 has its perks. 鈥淵ou want some of that leaf litter to cover and make a nice bedding and insulate the soil around most of the roots of your plants,鈥 she said. Plus, leaf litter and the hollow stems of native plants (black-eyed Susans and echinacea) provide shelter for insect friends and pollinators. 鈥淚f you really like the look of a neat garden and you don鈥檛 want all that vegetation and all the seed heads sticking up all over the place, I would say cut it off and then make a little pile, like a brush pile to the side, so that in the spring when (the pollinators) emerge, you still have them in your garden,鈥 Jentz said. (Getty Images)
different sizes of terracotta pots on outdoor table
Winterize The frequent frosts and thaws in this region can ruin gardening tools, including your hose and terra-cotta pots, which expand and constrict with the fluctuating temperatures. Jentz recommends draining your hose spigot and turning off your home鈥檚 line of water to the outside. If you have a space to store terra-cotta pots during the winter, bring them in. If you鈥檙e without a shed or basement, Jentz said stuff the pots with leaves and pull them against a brick wall for a little bit of protection. (Getty Images)
Image of potting shed and bean seeds
Set your sights, and seeds, on spring Look back on last year鈥檚 garden and note what did and didn鈥檛 do well. Washington Gardener hosts a seed exchange event in January, right around the time mail-order seed catalogs circulate. 鈥淎nd then by mid-February, you鈥檙e starting up your pepper and tomato seeds indoors for planting out in late spring,鈥 Jentz said. (Getty Images)
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fresh herbs preparation to be dried top view on wooden background
Fresh radish in garden
Mid-Atlantic gardeners can plant carrots this time of year, since the cold weather only makes them taste better. (Getty Images)
Senior woman planting garlic in the vegetable garden
Planting flower bulbs (tulip) in the garden in autumn
Autumn, Lawn, Public Park, Formal Garden, Sunset
different sizes of terracotta pots on outdoor table
Image of potting shed and bean seeds

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