Fresh Peas in August

Davin holding all of the pea plants

It must be noted for the sake of remembrance that on August 11, 2014, I pulled out what remained of this year’s pea plants. I could have let them go longer. These are the same peas that I sowed in April. 4 months ago!

This is by far the latest I have ever kept the same, continuous springtime pea crop in the ground. Most years they are yanked out in July, sometimes earlier or later depending on heat and rain. Often times I pull them out in time to plant a second crop of climbing beans in their place. By mid August those bean plants are well into their best producing days.

Not this year. This year was an odd duck. Winter was brutal. Spring came on slowly. Like most years I put my peas into the ground the moment the soil was soft enough to work with a spade. And then I waited. And waited. It was at least a month or more before they made the smallest movement. By then I’d pressed a few more into the ground, just to be sure. They took their time developing. It was early June before the pea plants were large enough to consider, and some time more before I enjoyed the first fresh flowers and pods.

Since then we’ve had many cool days and some shockingly cool night time temperatures that are not typical of summer in these parts. When it rains, the sky cracks open and lets loose a deluge. Not that I’m complaining. It batters many of the tallest plants for sure, but this is far, far, far more preferable than having no rain at all as I know that many of you are suffering through terrible drought. What it is, I suppose, is surprising. Fresh snap peas and beans, together on our plates, well into August. I am somewhat bewildered.

Lesson learned. I should not have waited so long while the pea seeds sat there doing nothing. Peas are an early crop, but they need the soil to warm up before they will germinate. Most years that happens steadily without intervention from me. This year was another reminder that you can’t rely on the same old way of doing things year-after-year. Things change, and what worked the last five seasons may not work in the sixth. I was too eager for spring and I plopped the seeds in without consideration. I could have warmed the soil before planting or covered the pea seeds with plastic bottle cloches when I realized that spring was going to come late.

Regardless of how long they took to develop, what I could not have anticipated were the cold nights and how long the plants would thrive as a result. In that sense I did adapt. I let the peas keep going for as long as they were still growing and healthy, bonus bean crop be damned. Instead, we ate peas galore, snacking on fresh pods, shoots, and flowers well past their time. I made pea pod wine. I am thinking about making a fresh pea hummus or a cool pea, mint, and cucumber soup. Peas in August offer all sorts of new possibilities. I’m not yet sure what I will make. Or what will happen next.

Gayla Trail
Gayla is a writer, photographer, and former graphic designer with a background in the Fine Arts, cultural criticism, and ecology. She is the author, photographer, and designer of best-selling books on gardening, cooking, and preserving.

Subscribe to get weekly updates from Gayla

6 thoughts on “Fresh Peas in August

  1. I can’t tell by the photo.. Did you plant peas in a raised bed? I am running out of room in my small beside-the-sidewalk garden…Can i plant peas in a container?

    • Most of my peas are in raised beds but I also pop them into open spaces along the fence line wherever I can. Those plants came out earlier because they’re not in amended soil like the raised beds and so they are subjected to some drought (I have sandy soil).

      Yes, I experimented with a range of pea varieties in different containers when I was growing on the roof. Try ‘Tom Thumb’ in really small pots. ‘Dwarf Gray Sugar’ is also good but will need a deeper pot. Other varieties do just fine but they need about 12″ minimum. Scroll down this page [https://www.yougrowgirl.com/tripod-and-pea-staking/] and you can see a pic of a garbage can of peas that I grew some years back.

  2. Wow, that is quite the opposite of what has been going on here with my peas! Usually I am in your situation where I have to wait until quite later in spring to sow, but I get a good, long harvest. This year I waited until June to sow but had a horrible crop because we’ve had so many really, really hot days. I actually ended up pulling out the plants of an entire pot because they had dried out from heat before they even got a chance to flower. The other pot has been so disappointing – only a small bowl. But other things that don’t normally produce well are doing great, so it’s weird.

    • It’s been an odd year all around. Some things have thrived above and beyond while others have failed miserably. Such is gardening. You never know what will happen!

  3. Same thing here with the peas, except it’s August 23 and my telephone peas are STILL producing pods, although the plants are looking pretty bewildered. I didn’t have the heart to pull them, so just put some new pea seeds at their feet to come up under for fall- shorter ones this time. You describe our summer here (Michigan) perfectly- this year anyway. Weird all around for sure. :)

  4. My peas went through to July this year, Sugar Ann Snap Pea, edible podded. A good long happy crop. Many cool days and nights during the spring. I pulled the vines when they were mostly dry to use as carbon (browns) for a compost class here in the back yard.

    We are quite dry here and as I watch the green blobs hopefully on the weather maps I see them all going to your garden, Gayla! Send some back down here to Pennsylvania if you can.

Comments are closed.