7 Tips For Reducing Your Garden Workload This Labor Day

Labor Day is made for appreciating hard work, enjoying end-of-summer days, and restoring for upcoming projects. To ease garden maintenance at this point in the season and in the future, consider a few techniques to streamline the workload. Explore effort-saving methods with gardener Katherine Rowe.

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As we take a break this Labor Day to honor the strength and prosperity of good work, find a moment to do the same in the garden. The holiday weekend is a chance to soak in the last big days of summer and regroup for the coming season, including steps to reduce your workload for easier gardening next year.

Summer’s transition is an excellent time to inventory your soil and infrastructure and consider simple adjustments. Here, we’ll highlight easy ways to make gardening efficient, productive, and less labor-intensive.

Get deals on garden beds, grow bags, seed-starting essentials, and more with up to 30% off during Epic Gardening’s Labor Day Sale running now through September 9th! 

Incorporate Raised Beds

View of a lawn with metal raised beds in black, white, and green, featuring black hoses installed for watering the young seedlings planted in the beds.
Raised beds are accessible garden options, making harvesting and tending plants easier.

4-Pack 29″ Tall Birdies Medium Modular Raised Bed

4-pack labor day sale medium modular Birdies raised bed
  • Built to last 20+ years
  • Easy to install and configure
  • Food-safe materials for healthy soils and crops
  • Corrosion and rust-resistant
  • Available in a wide range of shapes and sizes
  • Save up to $274.99

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Raised beds are easy to use and one of the best ways to reduce your garden workload. They allow gardeners to grow an array of vegetables, herbs, and ornamentals while controlling site placement, soil quality, and moisture needs. These elevated planters accommodate cut flowers, pollinator favorites, shade selections, fruits and food crops, and more.

Raised beds are accessible garden options, making harvesting and tending plants easier. As elevated planters or ground-level frames, varying heights and sizes increase the ease of access in maneuvering around the containers. 

The beds adapt easily to different crops and seasonal changes, and pulling and planting new arrangements is less labor-intensive (way less back-hunching!) They also create more manageable weed control.

Raised beds offer solutions to challenging situations in areas with poor soils, drainage issues, small spaces, or no soil at all. They also provide a fun, functional growing opportunity. Whether metal or cedar raised beds, lasting materials bring a variety of configurations to the function and layout of the garden space.

Get Portable With Grow Bags

A black fabric grow bag filled with rich soil and sprouting a mix of vibrant leafy greens and herbs, showcasing a practical and compact method of cultivating fresh produce in a small space.
Simply fill a bag with the potting soil of your choice and grow your favorite plants instead of employing a bulky planter.

Epic Lined Grow Bag

Lined Grow Bag
  • BPA-free
  • Liner retains moisture while allowing air flow for roots
  • Irrigation-retaining strip for drip setup
  • UV-resistant

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Growing plants in fabric bags is a versatile way to grow and expands site options. The bags are portable, available in different sizes, and easy to fill, making gardening possible in spaces with poor drainage, weed issues, or challenging soils. Instead of hauling heavy containers around, choose a grow bag for seasonal crops or to grow out plants as they establish for transplanting.

Simply fill a bag with the potting soil of your choice and grow your favorite plants instead of employing a bulky planter. Choose the bag based on plant size, from small bags for lettuce to extra large ones to house young trees or shrubs.

Lined fabric bags retain moisture and insulation to promote healthy roots. They don’t dry out as quickly as unlined or thin bags, lessening watering frequency. Grow bags are easy to store when not in use, and they are long-lasting.

Streamline Seed Starting

Close-up of starting seed trays on a wooden table. These starting trays are plastic and have recessed cells filled with fresh soil.
We love cell packs for their airflow to roots and ease of removing seedlings from the pack.

The Epic Seed Starting Bundle

The bundle features 8 four-cell trays, 12 six-cell trays, and 2 universal bottom trays for successful seed propagation and transplanting to your outdoor haven.
  • Includes cell packs and trays
  • Longlasting and durable for years of seeding
  • Made in the USA from recycled, BPA-free, UV-treated materials

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Starting plants from seed is rewarding and economical. It gives us the opportunity to grow varieties that are not commonly available, like heirlooms. Seedlings get a jump start on seasonal readiness to establish strong roots and larger plants earlier for lasting rewards.

As we begin to look toward the cool season, consider seed-starting strategies. Mild climates can sow year-round, while many of us start seeds in the winter months for early spring transplanting. Reusable cell packs, trays, and pots cut down on waste and make it easy to start seeds indoors and harden them off outside.

We love cell packs for their airflow to roots and ease of removing seedlings from the pack—simply pop them out with a finger through an opening in the bottom of the cell. Universal trays are durable and sturdy for long-lasting support. Buy pieces in a bundle or individually to get growing.

Ease Watering Sessions

An olla filled with water, sitting atop a ground covered in mulch.
To ease watering, consider upgrading supplies and incorporating self-watering techniques.

Garden Watering Pot

Garden Oya Watering Pot
  • Ancient watering technique with modern conveniences
  • Reduces water consumption and time while fostering healthy plants
  • Vacation friendly – less water worries when away from the garden

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Around Labor Day, our plants still need plenty of water to withstand weather fluctuations and long, warm, end-of-summer days. To ease watering, consider upgrading supplies and incorporating self-watering techniques.

The garden Oya watering pot uses a unique olla technique to reduce watering needs drastically. These pots use a porous terracotta clay reservoir to deliver water to the surrounding soil. 

To use the pots, bury them in the garden bed and fill the reservoir with water. The porous terracotta leaches water into the soil. Roots are drawn to the water source, sending themselves toward the pot and soaking up just the amount of water they require.

The watering pots are available in three sizes to accommodate various watering needs and bed sizes. Store the pot indoors over the winter in cold climates to prevent the clay from cracking. Give yourself a break with this easy method, built on ancient techniques.

Do A Soil Test

Close up of glass test tube full of soil stuck into moist dark brown soil mixed with compost against blurred green background.
With this test, gardeners receive a complete analysis with easy-to-follow information.

Epic Soil Testing Kit

Soil Testing Kit
  • Easy to use with quick results
  • Determines soil composition and macro and micronutrients
  • Results provide analysis and amendment recommendations

Buy at Epic Gardening

Soil testing is a valuable tool for inventorying the soil composition and state of available nutrients. Healthy garden soils mean a reduced workload down the road. A soil test every three to five years maximizes growing conditions. Testing near Labor Day allows time to add amendments for fall planting and to make longer adjustments toward spring. 

Soil tests help us know what we have too much or too little of in our garden soil and how to adjust it for the best growing conditions. With this test, gardeners receive a complete analysis with easy-to-follow information. It also includes recommendations on fertilizers and amendments to use to balance the soil.

Soil test results indicate pH levels, as important as other nutrient levels for vigorous plants. If you’re dreaming of blue hydrangeas or need to balance the pH, testing indicates whether to add garden lime or sulfur. These amendments take a few months to fully incorporate into soils; adding them in the fall is optimal.

Each soil kit includes a sampling bag to test soil from a single area. After taking the sample, send the soil to the lab using the mailer with pre-paid shipping (included in the kit cost). Results arrive digitally in about a week, with readings, explanations, and recommendations. Your local university extension office also offers soil testing and recommendations.

Grow Vertically

A tall, vertical structure adorned with rows of lush, green plants, neatly arranged on an apartment balcony, demonstrating an efficient use of space for urban cultivation.
Greenstalk plantings are versatile structures with stacked planting pockets for easy growth and harvesting.

Greenstalk Vertical Planter

GreenStalk 5 Tier Vertical Planter

  • Made in East Tennessee from high-quality, food-grade, UV-resistant, BPA, BPS & PVC-free plastic
  • Easy watering and planting for a diversity of plants
  • 5-Year Warranty

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To save ourselves some work this Labor Day and beyond, consider going vertical with trellises, arches, or streamlined planters. Greenstalk plantings are versatile structures with stacked planting pockets for easy growth and harvesting. The columnar pockets and water reservoir streamline planting, growing, maintenance, and space. While space-saving, it doesn’t limit growth potential, and many plants grow well in various configurations.

In late summer, grow vertical crops that bridge summer and winter and adapt to weather fluctuations. Or choose cold-hardy selections to overwinter for a spring harvest. For Greenstalk and upright potted growers, use bok choy, garlic, radish, scallions, kohlrabi, beets, and lettuces.

Whether growing in upright columns or along arches and trellises, vertical growth adds interest and dimension to the layout. It also promotes:

  • Space-saving: From small sites like balconies, courtyards, and patios to raised beds and containers, upright structures fit in various spaces. 
  • Disease prevention: Lifting leaves and stems off the ground improves air circulation. Improving airflow with less crowded and damp conditions helps keep fungal problems like powdery mildew at bay. The reduced leaf moisture makes it more difficult for fungi to thrive.
  • Scouting: Looking for pests and diseases is easier with vertical specimens. Inspect regularly for mildewed or spotted leaves and snip them off. Insects may be easier to detect on open-air growers, as fewer pest hiding places exist.
  • Access to sunlight: Lifting plants off the ground increases light exposure for all-around even growth.
  • Easier physical access: Reduce your physical garden workload by standing up more and bending over less.

Sow A Cover Crop

A close-up of crimson clover plants showcasing vivid red flowers contrasted against lush green leaves.
Cover cropping is easy and does the work for us while the garden takes a break.

Crimson Clover

Crimson Clover Cover Crop Seeds

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Crimson Clover Cover Crop Seeds

Common Buckwheat

Buckwheat Cover Crop Seeds

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Common Buckwheat Cover Crop Seeds

Fava Bean

Fava Bean Cover Crop Seeds

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Fava Bean Cover Crop Seeds

Cover crops are easy to sow and improve growing conditions in the long term. If you’re not planning a fall growing rotation or have bare earth to hold until spring, specialized plants help improve and nourish the site. Fall-planted grasses and legumes work with microorganisms to protect and enrich soil between primary crop-growing phases.

Benefits of cover crops include:

  • Weed suppression: The seasonal crop, planted densely, covers an area and inhibits weedy growth.
  • Reduces erosion: Roots and leafy growth protect surface soils against harsh winter conditions, especially in windy or sloped sites.
  • Improves soil nutrients: By providing resources for microorganisms, cover crops enrich nutrient cycling and nitrogen fixation for plant and soil health. Added organic matter breaks down for extra enrichment.
  • Less compaction: Cover crop roots create channels to help with aeration and improve soil structure. They retain moisture and prevent excess drying.
  • Reduced garden workload: Less weeds and better soil drainage means less hard labor in your landscape.

Best of all, cover cropping is easy and does the work for us while the garden takes a break. Opt for fall seed species or mixes and scatter them evenly and generously. Enjoy the fall and winter greens with minimal maintenance and watering during dry spells.

Cut them back for the next round of seasonal planting before they go to seed. Leave the cut material in place or add it to the compost pile. Cover crops also benefit pollinators in transitional seasons. Use them in raised beds for soil improvement during quiet times.

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An array of tall, vibrant, yellow helianthus annus bloom, growing in a garden, basking in the sun.

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A cheerful array of colorful, vibrant pansies with large, round, overlapping petals in an array of colors including deep purples, and yellows, each with a distinct dark blotch at the center.

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Nature has a way of bringing the cool season just in time to relieve a fading summer garden. Autumn brings a flush of fresh growth and flowering and an opportunity to extend the display with cool-season blooms. Many gardeners can start planting their shoulder-season blooms in late summer to establish before heavy frost. Enjoy a burst of warm color on upcoming chilly days by starting cool-season selections now. Explore timely seasonal growers with garden expert Katherine Rowe.

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August brings simultaneous harvesting and selective planting. When it comes to crops to start in August, the best ones bridge warm late-summer temperatures and extend into cooler days and nights. So, what’s the Epic Gardening team planting in our late summer gardens? Join gardener Katherine Rowe to learn what Kevin and the expert crew select as August favorites for late-season crops.

An array of various exquisite bearded iris flowers, in vibrant shades of yellow, purple, lavender, blue, and coral.

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One of many fall-blooming flowers plant in August, marigold flowers and buds sitting in a garden with brightly colored petals and leaves with saw-like edges.

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15 Fall-Blooming Flowers to Plant in August

August is one of the hottest months of the year in most places, so it can be difficult to go out and enjoy the garden. But those crisp, cool days of autumn are right around the corner, perfect for alfresco dining. Join gardening expert Melissa Strauss in planting some beautiful, fall-blooming flowers this August!