If you want low maintenance over the summer and to improve the soil, you can plant a summer cover crop and then till it into the soil when you're ready to start your fall crop. It helps keep pests out of the soil and weeds. I'm planning to do that this year to make the soil healthier.
In previous years I have planted a late tomato crop (zone 7b) and pumpkins in July so that they're ready for the students when they start the year and they can care for and harvest them. we keep herbs going year round as well in our zone.
You can get great cover crops here, this is the summer mix I'm getting (again zone 7b): https://www.groworganic.com/products/summer-soil-builder-mix-raw-lb
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Hillary Neaf
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Original Message:
Sent: 03-19-2025 02:05:41 PM
From: Anna Barsotti
Subject: Summer spreadsheet and to-do's list
Thanks in advance for your help - and for all these threads I didn't even know I needed answers for!
In preparation of summer and school being out, I wonder what you utilize for keeping track of to-do's and tasks, as well as watering and weeding? Any great resource that's an easy click away or are you creating your own? This will be our garden's first summer and as School Garden Coordinator I am erring on the side of planting and caring for fewer things but doing it in a quality way, rather than a full garden that we don't have enough care for.
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Anna Barsotti
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