10 essential autumn garden jobs. A sepia-toned line drawing on parchment showing a rustic wooden trug filled with apples, squash, carrots, and beetroot, drawn in a technical illustration style.
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10 Essential Autumn Gardening Jobs You Shouldn’t Forget This Month

Autumn might feel like the winding down of the gardening year, but in truth it’s a pivot point. The allotment looks different now: beans rustling in the breeze, squash turning from green to orange, apples dropping with a thud. It’s a season of clearing away, storing, and planting ahead — and a few smart jobs in September and October will make life much easier when spring returns.

Here are 10 essential autumn gardening jobs you’ll be glad you didn’t forget.


1. Harvest and Store Your Crops

This is the month of heavy baskets. Apples, onions, squash, and potatoes are all ready — but how you store them makes the difference between a glut you can enjoy slowly, or a heap that spoils.


2. Clear Away Spent Crops

Once-lush courgettes and tomatoes often look sad by September. Don’t let them linger and harbour disease. Chop and compost them — your future soil will thank you.


3. Mulch and Feed the Soil

Think of this as tucking your soil in for the winter. A blanket of compost or manure protects it from rain and frost, while feeding microbes that’ll do the hard work for you.


4. Sow Green Manures

Bare soil leaches nutrients, so why not let plants do the work? Clover, rye, or vetch sown now hold the soil together and boost fertility for spring.


5. Plant Garlic and Onions

Few things are more satisfying than planting cloves now and seeing shoots in the frosty months ahead. Garlic especially loves the winter chill.

Autumn Garlic Bulbs


6. Protect Tender Plants

The first frosts often catch gardeners out. Be ready — and you’ll squeeze out a few more harvests.


7. Prune and Tidy Perennials

Perennials left standing can look messy and give pests a winter home. A sharp pair of secateurs is your best friend here.


8. Collect and Save Seeds

There’s something deeply satisfying about saving your own seed. A few dry pods in September become next year’s free harvest.


9. Clean and Store Tools

This is the “quiet satisfaction” job. Clean, sharpen, and oil your tools now, and they’ll reward you with years more use.


10. Plant Bulbs for Spring Colour

It might be hard to picture spring when nights are drawing in, but the bulbs you plant now will be your reward in February and March.


Final Thoughts

Autumn is a time of endings and beginnings. Clear away what’s finished, tuck your soil in for the winter, and plant with an eye on spring. With the right tools and a little effort now, your allotment will reward you with fresh growth and colour just when you need it most.

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