Cold Frame Gardening

Cold Frames are great for stretching the garden’s growing season at both ends. In the spring cold frames provide a sheltered area for seed starting and to harden off transplants that were grown indoors.

During the fall, cold frames enable you to harvest fresh vegetables longer by protecting your plants from frost and cold temperatures.

Cold Frame Styles and Construction

Portable Cold FrameBuilding a cold frame can be as simple as attaching a discarded window sash to a box shaped framework of wooden boards or by placing the window sash over a group of straw bales arranged to form a rectangular base.

Instead of constructing a homemade cold frame, you can purchase commercial units made out of high tech materials that are designed to retain warmth and transmit sunlight to the plants growing inside.

Inexpensive models are available that are constructed with a plastic or metal tube frame that’s covered by a transparent, woven plastic fabric. This style of cold frame is lightweight, portable, and an easily be moved from one section of the garden to another, making them ideal for use in raised bed gardens.

Permanent Location Cold FrameThe more expensive types of cold frames use an aluminum framing that’s covered with twin walled poly-carbonate panels. These units are sturdier and provide better insulation, but are not as portable and usually remain in a permanent, fixed location outside of the garden.

Cold Frame Gardening During the Fall

For growing fall gardens, plants can be sown directly in the fixed location cold frame during late summer, or winter vegetables that were planted in the garden beds can be covered with one of the portable style cold frames.

In cold northern climates, even with the shelter of a cold frame, plant growth will slow or stop as temperatures drop below freezing. But the cold frame will enable you to continue growing and harvesting organic vegetables well beyond your normal growing season.

When spring returns, many of the vegetables that were planted in the cold frames the previous fall will resume growing to offer extra early fresh produce at a time that the garden’s beds are still frozen and inactive.

Using Cold Frames in the Spring

Leafy Greens Growing in Cold FrameAt the end of winter the cold frame can be used as a nursery bed for starting seedlings of lettuce, kale, spinach, and other leafy greens. Sow the seeds thickly and let them germinate and grow inside the cold frame until spring arrives. When outdoor conditions are suitable the seedlings can be thinned and transplanted from the cold frame into the garden’s raised beds.

Cold frames can also be used in the spring to harden off transplants which were started indoors and grown under lights. Placing the flats or containers of transplants inside the cold frame will allow them to gradually adjust to the harsher growing conditions encountered outdoors, without the need to bring the plants back inside during the night.

Crops growing inside cold frames can survive with little or no watering or other attention over the winter months. But you will need to keep a close eye on the plants growing in cold frames during the fall, and especially during the spring to ensure that they receive sufficient moisture and to vent the cold frame to prevent plants from overheating on warm days.



Other Related Vegetable Gardening Posts:

Check Out These Home and Garden Resources You May Like...

This entry was posted on Friday, February 17th, 2006 at 8:29 pm and is filed under Fall Vegetable Gardening. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Responses to “Cold Frame Gardening”

  1. Henry Lees Says:

    Been doing a lot of gardening from early childhood picking up road apples for my grandmother’s garden to now, from using calcium and epson salts for my tomatoes, to matches for my pepper plants. But I still find new info from this site to improve my knowledge for gardening. Keep up the good work. (Hank)

  2. Kenny Point Says:

    Ahhh, the old matches next to the pepper plants trick, I haven’t heard that one in a while. Hank, thanks for visiting the site and for the kind comments. Please stop back soon and let your gardening friends know about the site.

  3. Little Hawk Says:

    Hank

    What is this about epsom salts for tomatoes? First I have heard of this. Would you explain more about that, please. In the northwest it is hard to grow tomatoes, maybe this is a trick that will help. Thanks

  4. Mike Timbrook Says:

    My God, this site has everything I need to know about vegetables, Thank You.

Leave a Reply



Featured Links

Recent Comments


Kenny Point: That was a good find Luba, I’ve never seen salsify listed on any restaurant menu that I’ve...


Luba: Today I fell in love with salsify. We stopped at a Austrian-style restaurant in upstate New York and it was on...


David Walker: Auricularia auricula-judae - commonly knoownas the Jews Ear or Wood Ear. The name Jew’s Ear comes...


weyn: Oh, by the way, the first photo (Click here) is the rat’s ear I was asking about. This second one (click...


weyn: Have you ever heard/ Is there a “rat’s ear mushroom”? Here in our country, we call it...

Google
Web This Site