On April 10, 2024

Cold frames can extend gardening season, start in April


By Erda Estemera/Unsplash
Lettuce grows best in well-drained, nutrient-rich soil, so soil should be amended accordingly before starting this cool-season vegetable in a cold frame.

By Andrea Knepper, UVM Extension Master Gardener

Get a jump start on the growing season by adding a cold frame to your garden. A cold frame allows you to start some plants two to four weeks before the recommended planting time.

Any cool-season vegetable is a suitable candidate for growing in a cold frame. Popular choices include lettuce, spinach, kale, radishes and scallions.

With the new plant hardiness zones (planthardiness.ars.usda.gov), gardeners in many locations in Vermont will be able to plant in a cold frame beginning in early April. Check the upcoming weather forecast before planting. When outside temperatures are in the 40s, you can expect the average temperature within the cold frame to be comfortably above 50 degrees F.

Prepare the soil in your cold frame with the same care and attention as you would for other garden beds. Lettuce, in particular, prefers well-drained, nutrient-rich soil, so make sure to amend your soil accordingly.

Plant your vegetables according to the spacing and depth recommendations on your seed packets. Leafy greens like lettuce, spinach and kale can be densely seeded and harvested before reaching full maturity. Refer to the seed packet for additional care and growing instructions. Remember to water your plants in the cold frame whenever the soil feels dry.

Monitoring temperature and airflow within the cold frame is essential. Temperatures can quickly rise too high for cool-season vegetables, so close attention is necessary. Prop open the lid of the cold frame to regulate temperature and promote airflow. A small opening of just a couple of inches can be enough. Be sure to close the lid in the evening to protect your vegetables from overnight cold temperatures.

Early spring isn’t the only time a cold frame is useful. Cold frames also can be used for hardening off warm-season vegetables such as tomatoes, eggplants and peppers that you have started indoors. Transplants purchased from a local greenhouse or garden center are typically hardened off before sale although these can be placed in a cold frame for a week or longer before planting in the garden.

While you might need to bring your plants indoors overnight during particularly cold spells, often simply closing the lid on the cold frame is sufficient. Keep an eye on the weather forecast when using your cold frame for hardening off plants.

Fall presents another opportunity to benefit from a cold frame. You can plant cool-season vegetables in the cold frame toward the end of the season.

This can extend your growing season by two weeks or more beyond the first frost. Follow the same process to enjoy a late harvest of leafy vegetables, scallions and radishes well into the fall.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Native cherry trees: spring beauty, ecological gold

May 15, 2024
Each spring, cities from New York to Texas celebrate the spectacular blooming of ornamental cherry trees. In many cultures, the lovely, delicate pink and white cherry blossoms symbolize rebirth and renewal, as well as the fleeting nature of life. Beyond these showy cultivated trees, our region boasts three native cherry species, which are important in…

Remembering downtown pharmacists from yesteryear

May 15, 2024
When I saw the obituary for Lucian Wiskoski back in March I realized that he was the last of Rutland’s downtown pharmacists whom I had the pleasure of knowing from childhood into adulthood. Back in the ‘50s five pharmacies were located in downtown Rutland. They were: Shangraw’s, Carpenter’s, Carroll Cut Rate, McClallen’s, and Beauchamp &…

Absorbed and absorbing the moguls of Superstar

May 15, 2024
I couldn’t find my center of balance for the life of me. A few days off from skiing and I felt like a fish flopping about on dry land. I would get stuck in the rut and get launched upwards and then I could feel my weight slamming into the back of my boots. The…

It was 30 years ago today

May 15, 2024
I never dreamed of being a writer, I just happened to be in the right place at the right time. It was an early morning in 1994, and I was standing in the composition department of the Mountain Times, having been hired the prior year as a part-time graphic artist. Computers were just coming onto…