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    The Farmer Diaries

    Texas farmer plots out strategy for winter garden despite late start

    Marshall Hinsley
    Oct 19, 2014 | 6:00 am

    After a prolonged summer, cooler weather has arrived, and I can begin planting cool-season vegetables. We may think of gardening as a spring activity, but winter is one of the easiest growing seasons if you plant the right crops.

    These crops also happen to be among the most nutritious, including carrots and dark, leafy greens such as kale and collards.

    Cool-season crops are diverse and can be grown for nearly eight months — just as long as spring and summer crops. And winter gardening is low-maintenance; other than watering the beds every week or two if they dry out and covering them if there's a freeze, there's little to do.

    Cool-season crops are diverse and can be grown for nearly eight months — just as long as spring and summer crops.

    I'd like to plant Swiss chard, beets, broccoli, cauliflower, kale and collard greens, although guides such as the Old Farmer's Almanac recommend these be planted by the end of summer. I would have planted earlier, but as late as October, grasshoppers were still everywhere, devouring the few kale sprouts I did plant at the recommended time.

    Furthermore, the soil was dry, hard and hot, which created an inhospitable environment for seed to germinate and sprouts to thrive.

    I may plant them anyway. Cool-season crops survive cold snaps just fine, even a brief plunge below freezing if they're covered with a frost blanket. I will need to have plenty of frost blankets on hand if the chilly winter outlook of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration pans out, with below-average temperatures predicted for the south central and southeastern United States.

    But now is the optimum time for spinach, mustard greens, turnips, lettuce, radishes and carrots. These crops not only tolerate the cold, but they also taste their best when it's frigid outside.

    A few years ago, I harvested spinach that I pulled up through snow; the leaves were green, crispy and delicate, just as if they were out on display on a layer of shaved ice in the grocery store produce section. I've never lacked for carrots, ready to be harvested all winter, even when I'm wearing a heavy coat and bracing against a harsh northern wind.

    I'll plant in raised beds. During the summer, my raised beds are prone to drying out too fast between watering sessions, no matter how much organic matter I incorporate or how high I pile the mulch. But in the fall and winter, raised beds are ideal.

    Now is the optimum time for spinach, mustard greens, turnips, lettuce, radishes and carrots.

    After a long rain saturates the ground around them, the soil within a raised bed remains moist but well drained, just right for the roots. They warm up during the day, which seems to spur the vegetables' growth.

    They're also easier to cover with a frost blanket. Their 4-by-8-foot perimeter is the perfect size. Using boards and a few cement blocks, I can tuck the sides of the blanket inside the frame and cover my crops whenever there's a freeze in the weather forecast. No polar vortex has overpowered this protective measure yet.

    This week, I planted spinach, Swiss chard and carrots. To prepare the beds, I removed the weeds but otherwise, I didn't have much to do. Having added soil amendments for the past several years, I didn't need to add more; they build up in the soil rather than wash away. Tilling wasn't necessary because the soil was loose, moist and spongy.

    I parted the soil with my hand, making inch-deep furrows. I spaced each furrow as far apart as the seed packet for each crop specified. Then, I sowed the seed and gently covered it by hand by pushing a little of the parted dirt back into the furrow.

    Each bed took only about 10 minutes to plant. I watered with a watering can, and that was it. The soil will stay moist enough this time of year that I need water only about twice a week.

    In the next couple of weeks, I'll plant turnips for turnip greens, and I'll make successive plantings of carrots so that every week or two, another bed of carrots will reach maturity. I'll plant a bed of cilantro too, which grows its best in winter here in Texas.

    By November, I'll finish all my planting for the cool season. At that time, the first rewards should begin to show up on my plate as baby spinach. While I've been weeding, I've come across holdouts of Swiss chard and collard greens that I planted last spring. I abandoned them when pests took over, and summer heat made them too much of a hassle to tend.

    But they're now bouncing back into shape, revitalized by the rainfall, giving me a head start on these crops. Such pleasant surprises are the rewards of sustainable farming.

    Tattered and forgotten, Swiss chard planted last spring rebounds in a raised garden bed after a fall rain.

    Photo by Marshall Hinsley
    Tattered and forgotten, Swiss chard planted last spring rebounds in a raised garden bed after a fall rain.
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    Charitable Event

    Volunteers wanted for H-E-B's free holiday feast at Fair Park Dallas

    Teresa Gubbins
    Nov 10, 2025 | 4:18 pm
    Feast of Sharing
    Photo courtesy of H-E-B
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    H-E-B and its family of brands, including Central Market, Joe V’s Smart Shop, and Favor, will bring back the annual Feast of Sharing dinner this holiday season to both Dallas and Fort Worth.

    The two events are as follows:

    • Dallas Feast of Sharing is on Thursday, November 20 from 3-7 pm at Centennial Hall in Fair Park
    • Fort Worth Feast of Sharing is on Wednesday, November 12 from 3-7 pm at Dickies Arena

    Both events will feature a Texas-style holiday meal alongside a festive celebration complete with a kid’s zone, live entertainment, health and family services, Santa greetings, and more. Meals are FREE and open to the public (first come first serve).

    Anticipate preparations to serve meals to 10,000+ people, msic, family activities, wellness screenings, and visits from Santa.

    Volunteers
    The organizers are seeking 1,000 volunteers in each city to assist with serving meals, clearing tables, hosting, and supporting the kid’s zone area during the four-hour events. All businesses, civic organizations, churches and schools are encouraged to sign up at www.centralmarket.com/community.

    “We couldn’t bring this event to life without the dedication of our volunteers,” said Mabrie Jackson, managing director of public affairs, H-E-B/Central Market. “The holidays are about giving and community, and this year we’re proud to make a meaningful difference by sharing a delicious holiday meal with more families.”

    The event, which has been held in Dallas since 2006 and Fort Worth since 2011, typically serves 10,000-15,000 residents in each city. In addition, more than 40 social service agencies are on hand with representatives to provide information and resources.

    Since 1989, Central Market’s parent company, H-E-B, has invited people to celebrate the holidays with food, music, and good cheer at its Feast of Sharing events. The free holiday feasts, which are held in more than 34 cities in Texas and Mexico, bring together family, friends, and neighbors, and provides H-E-B an opportunity to give thanks to its loyal customers, regularly serving more than 340,000 meals.

    In the more than three decades H-E-B has held these celebrations, more than 375,000 volunteers have helped serve nearly four million meals. This initiative is a part of H-E-B’s Hunger Relief Program, which works year-round to prevent hunger in the more than 300 communities H-E-B serves. Last year, H-E-B’s Hunger Relief Program donated 33 million pounds of food to families in need. Since 1982, the year the program was founded, H-E-B has donated more than one billion pounds of food to 5,500 non-profit organizations in Texas and Mexico.

    Dallas Feast of Sharing – 19th Annual Holiday DinnerThursday, November 20, 2025, 3-7 pm, Fair Park – Centennial Hall 1001 Washington St.
    Fort Worth Feast of Sharing – 13th Annual Holiday DinnerWednesday, November 12, 2025, 3-7 pm, Dickies Arena (Lower level – southeast side of arena)1911 Montgomery St.

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