WHAT TO PLANT IN
September


Central/Midwest Region

Central-Midwest Gardening Region map


SpinachMulchedBP

 

“Members of a local garden club visited our place one day late in September. There was hardly a square foot of garden space empty. They exclaimed, “Your garden is as green as it was in June. It looks like spring, and we are almost in October. How do you do it?” Our answer is simple: Continue planting.”

Helen and Scott Nearing, The Fall Garden

September/October 1979

To read more about what to plant in other months and regions, visit our What to Plant Now home page.


 

Top Crops for Central and Midwest Gardening:

TurnipBP

Here are the Top Ten crops for the Midwest region, followed by other recommended crops, as rated in our National Survey of Most Productive Garden Crops. (The criteria for selection include ease of culture, efficient use of garden space and time, ease of storage and desirability at the table.) The recommended crops are sorted by plant family to help you plan rotations so that the same plant families are not grown consecutively in the same area, as much as possible.

Top 10 Crops: Central and Midwest Region

1. Slicing tomato
2. Sweet pepper
3. Cherry tomato
4. Onion
5. Bush snap bean
6. Carrot
7. Garlic
8. Paste tomato
9. Snow/snap pea
10. Lettuce

Other Highly Recommended Crops:

Cabbage family:  Broccoli, cabbagecollards, kale, kohlrabi

Cucumber family:  Cucumberpumpkinsummer squash, winter squash 

Leafy greens:  Arugula, chardmustard (all types), pac choi, sorrel, spinach, turnip

Legumes:  Dry soup beans, pole snap beans, shell peas, Southern peas

Root crops:  Beet, parsnip, potato, rutabaga, shallotturnip

Tomato family:  Hot peppers, tomatillo

Miscellaneous:  Asparagusleekokra, rhubarbscallion, sweet corn

VEGETABLES

Sow Indoors  

Sow Outdoors 

Transplant

Arugula XXX 
Chinese cabbageXXXXXX
Collards XXX  
Endive XXX 

Lettuce

XXXXXX
Mache XXX 
Mustard XXX 
Parsley XXX 

Peas 

 XXX 

Radish

 

 XXX 
Sorrel XXX 

Spinach

 XXX 
Turnip

 

 XXX 

Cover Crops

Sow Indoors  

Sow Outdoors 

Transplant

Alfalfa

XXX 

Buckwheat

XXX 
Hairy vetchXXX
Mustard XXX 
OatsXXX 
Radish XXX 
Rye, winter XXX 
Wheat XXX 

RESOURCES

* To learn more about when to sow seeds (indoors and outdoors) or when to transplant your seedlings to the garden, see: Know When to Plant What: Find Your Average Last Spring Frost Date.

* To learn more about how to start seeds, check out Seed-starting Basics. For a primer on how to transplant seedlings, see Garden Transplanting: Expert Advice.

* Find garden seeds from great mail-order companies with our Plant and Seed Finder.

* Learn more about high-quality seeds and great seed companies in Best Seeds for a Bigger, Better Garden and Best Garden Seed Companies, or through our seed company directory

* You might also try swapping seeds locally.

* For tips on growing everything from apples to zucchini, see our Organic Gardening homepage.

 



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