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Garden,  Plan - Design - DIY,  Sustainable Crafts

17 Wonderful Winter Garden Activities (Projects) To Do Indoors

There’s nothing wrong with embracing the slower, cozy days of winter and taking a break from gardening – especially after a busy fall of harvests and preserving! Yet the winter can feel like an awful long time to go without tending to plants and connecting with nature. Some of us feel most fulfilled when we’re in our happy place – the garden. Thankfully, there are a number of wonderful indoor winter garden activities that you can do to help satisfy that craving if you’d rather not be outside!

Read along and get inspired with this list of 17 fun winter garden activities and projects you can do inside. There are ideas for every budget and skill level. Beyond the comforts of your home, remember there are many ways to extend your growing season and continue gardening outdoors even as temperatures dip. And if you’re in a mild climate like ours, grow a fall garden right through winter too!



1) Organize Your Seed Collection


Even if you’re a few months away from planting them, why not play with your seeds now? Organizing garden seeds is one of my favorite winter garden activities. I like to go through my seed collection every year to assess what we have on hand, what we need more of, put away new seeds, and generally tidy things up. It definitely gets me excited in anticipation for spring! 

We used to keep our seed packs in a shoe box, overflowing into numerous old mailing envelopes they had once arrived in. It was messy and difficult to locate what I was looking for. Some seeds got completely buried and forgotten! 

If that sounds familiar and you haven’t jumped on the bandwagon with our favorite seed storage system yet… join us! These seed storage boxes are perfect for keeping seeds dry, organized, easy to find and tote around. Paired with these labels, they make my little Type A heart sing.


Seed containers, packs of seeds, seed catalogues, and a planting calendar are littered across a walnut table.
Our garden seeds neatly organized in our trusty seed storage boxes. Every type of veggie gets its own individual case: one for tomatoes, carrots, eggplant, squash, lettuce, and more! Larger seeds like beans may need 2 cases, depending on how many seeds you have.


2) Grow Microgreens


If you have a hankering to grow something NOW, try microgreens! Kale, alfalfa, and sunflower sprouts anyone? Growing microgreens indoors is a fantastic winter garden project – or something you can do year-round! They’re easy to grow, and can be done under a small grow light or in a bright sunny window. Plus, the fresh little microgreens are absolutely loaded with nutrients – in exponentially higher concentrations than their mature forms. I’m sure your winter body and palate will greatly appreciate that pop of green goodness!

Looking for supplies? We love these extra-durable microgreen growing kits from Bootstrap Farmer. You can use them with seedling soil, or pair them with reusable, biodegradable substrate mats (like these organic jute mats) to keep your microgreens clean and mess-free! Here is cute little all-in-one microgreen kit that also includes mats and seeds (though a smaller overall capacity). Finally, here is a really basic little grow light. Or, this one will provide more coverage to grow more.

For microgreen seeds, we love the certified organic offerings from High Mowing Seeds – though there are a lot of bulk organic options on Amazon too (see the full list here). Pop over to our step-by-step microgreens tutorial to learn even more!


A hand is pinching the tops of a handful of microgreens with a pair of scissors held to the base of the greens to harvest them as they are growing in a tray.
Harvesting sunflower sprouts


3) Plan for Spring


Ah, there’s nothing better than cuddling up with a hot cup of tea and stack of seed catalogs on a dreary winter day. Browsing through seed catalogs (or online) and planning for spring is another one of my favorite indoor winter garden activities! (See our favorite places to buy organic and heirloom garden seeds here.

After we do our seed shopping, I like to start thinking about where I will plant everything in the garden come spring. We try our best to practice crop rotation and consider companion planting while planning. To help organize my thoughts, I use our garden plot plan template (shown below) to map out where certain plants may go. It makes things SO much easier come transplanting day! They’re also useful to keep and reference from previous years – especially for crop rotation. The plan may change slightly come spring, but it’s fun to start daydreaming now.


A Homestead and Chill garden plot plan is filled in with drawings of raised beds with plants and corresponding letters on them. A key chart/list is below which contains A-Z so you can map which plant is where.
Get your own garden plot plant templates from our free printable garden planning toolkit, which also includes a companion planting chart and seed-starting calendars for every zone!


4) Try an Indoor Herb Garden


Microgreens aren’t the only thing you can grow inside. Consider growing fresh herbs too! Start a windowsill herb garden with a few small pots, or tuck them under a countertop grow light for even more success. The best herbs to grow inside include basil, chives, mint, parsley, lemon balm, and tarragon. You can also try to grow woodier perennial herbs like oregano, sage, rosemary, and thyme indoors, though they’re usually most happy outside – with ample sun and warm open soil to grow in. Learn even more about growing and using herbs here.


An image of an AeroGarden growing various herbs indoors. Growing herbs inside is a great winter garden activity.
I really want one of these gorgeous indoor gardens from AeroGarden. They’re perfect for growing herbs, lettuce, and more!


5) Make Homemade Bird Feeders


The kiddos will especially enjoy this fun winter garden project! Create a simple homemade bird feeder with a pinecone, some peanut butter, and wild bird seed. Lather peanut butter (or almond butter) in the grooves of the pinecone, and then roll or sprinkle it with bird seed – which will stick to the nut butter. Use twine or a soft pipe cleaner to hang your DIY pinecone bird feeder in a tree outside a window, and watch your feathered friends enjoy their protein-rich snack! It’s best to hang close to a small branch that the birds can perch on while they pick at the pinecone.


A bird is hanging upside down on a homemade peanut butter/bird seed pinecone that is hanging from a tree by a red pipe cleaner.
Photo courtesy of Birds and Blooms


6) Start a Worm Bin


Worm composting is my absolute favorite way to sustainably repurpose food waste! Not to mention, worm castings (aka worm poo) are the most incredible fertilizer and soil amendment you can use. Worm castings have the nickname “black gold” for a reason. With a worm bin, you can create that for free! And your garden will thank you endlessly. 

Worm bins are easy to set up, perfect for small spaces, and can even be kept indoors. Contrary to popular belief, worm compost bins do not smell bad (especially if they’re well-maintained). One of our followers secretly kept a worm bin under her kitchen sink for many months without her husband realizing it (who was opposed to having one)! We’ve had a worm bin for over a decade, including while living in an apartment in Rhode Island while I was in grad school. 

Learn how to create and maintain a simple, inexpensive tote-style worm bin here. Worms do need to be protected from freezing conditions, so if you can’t keep it inside during the winter, wrap the worm bin in insulating material like a wool or fleece blanket and store it in a protected location – such as a garage, shed, or basement. This indoor winter gardening project is another that the whole family will love!


An image of worm bin supplies on a garden patio table. There is a plastic tote bin full of brown fluffy rehydrated coco coir, a bag of compost worms, a stainless steel crock that holds food scraps, a pile of shredded newspaper, and a large empty bin, that will become the new worm bin.


7) Start Seeds for Spring


Though you won’t be planting most seedlings outside just yet, winter is the ideal time to start seeds for the coming spring garden season. Not only is seed-starting a fun indoor winter gardening activity, it’s essential in some cases! Folks with short growing seasons must get a jump start indoors, so they’ll have sizable seedlings to plant come spring – ones that will bear fruit faster. Pop over to our Seed Starting 101 guide to learn everything you need to know!  

Many common summer vegetable crops like tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, onions and more are started in the winter, several weeks to months before the last spring frost date in any given area. If you aren’t sure when to start seeds indoors in your area, check out our handy planting calendars. They’ll show you the best time to start seeds, transplant seedlings outside, or directly sow seeds outdoors for dozens of different vegetables, and every USDA hardiness zone! 


Many 6 pack seedling trays are lined up inside a greenhouse, each cell has many small seedlings poking up out of the soil. Each cell pack is labeled with its identifying plant.
We’ve started seeds in many places over the years: in a spare room in the house, in a greenhouse, and most recently, in a small barn/outbuilding at our new homestead.


8) Give Your Houseplants Some Love


If you can’t be outside, tending to your indoor houseplants can be one of the most satisfying winter garden activities – especially if they’ve been neglected! Perhaps it’s time to finally pot-up that root bound monstera, or re-stake your leaning rubber tree. Use microfiber gloves to remove dust from plant leaves and make them shine!

Late winter is also a good time to feed houseplants with a slow-release fertilizer, as they generally resume more vigorous growth come spring. Our Houseplant Care 101 article provides tips on soil, light, water, fertilizer, pests, cats, and more.

Maintenance aside, get creative with your plants! Rearrange them or swap pots to spice things up, or create a new fun plant shelf, hanger, or display. Heck, you could even adopt a new houseplant or two! Tell your plant-leery partner that “DeannaCat told me to”. I am willing to take the blame. 😉  Here is a cute DIY succulent terrarium idea too.


A brick fireplace centered on a wall is the feature, it is flanked with various houseplants of varying sizes and color. The mantle has various air plants and snake plants. An opposing wall has various cacti on a shelf while a pothos vine has been trained between the wall and ceiling as it moves towards the cacti shelf. There is a grey couch with pillows and a skinny dark walnut coffee table. Focusing on houseplants is a great winter garden activity when you need to get your green thumb going.
Must. Love. Plants.


9) Make Something With Preserved Garden Goods


There are all kinds of wonderful things you can make with goodies you’ve saved from the summer garden: homemade seasonings or tea blends with dried herbs, medicinal tinctures and balms, or dried flower arrangements and wreaths. For example, harvest and save dried calendula flowers during the busy summer season, and then take advantage of the slower winter months to finally make calendula-infused oil or healing salve. 

Admittedly this does take a little planning in advance… but perhaps you already have something on hand to use. For instance, do you have a bunch of frozen fruit in the freezer? It sounds like the perfect time to turn them into jam! 


Ideas to try:


A close up birds eye image six jars of calendula salve arranged like bowling pins. There is a dried calendula flower perched in between the top edges of a few of the jars. There are also dried flowers scattered around the area surrounding the jars.
Calendula salve is incredibly healing for a wide array of skin ailments, from rashes or burns to eczema and psoriasis – or plain dry skin!


10) Sanitize Garden Tools and Seed Starting Supplies


Winter is a great time to clean and sanitize your gardening tools and reusable seed starting supplies. Then you’re ready to go and can hit the ground running once the busy spring season arrives! Why sanitize? Routinely cleaning your garden tools is one important way to prevent the spread of disease in your garden, especially for susceptible little seedlings. Check out this article to learn how we like to sanitize our supplies.  


Pictured are two large plastic tubs, about 12 and 15 gallons in size. Inside is a cleaning solution made of water, vinegar, and hydrogen peroxide. Seedling pots are soaking in the solution, getting sanitized. Some other supplies like 6-packs and trays are nearby, waiting to be cleaned next. This is all outside on a concrete sidewalk. Sanitizing garden supplies is a great winter garden activity.


11) Grow Mushrooms In Your Kitchen


There are some types of fungi that you don’t want lurking in your kitchen (I’m looking at you, moldy creature in the back of the refrigerator) but here is a super neat winter gardening idea: grow some shrooms! Like microgreens, you obviously can adopt this hobby any time of year.

Mushrooms are fun and easy to grow indoors, especially since there are a ton of mushroom growing kits readily available that make it as easy as 1-2-3. The kits come pre-inoculated with mushroom spores (varieties of oyster mushrooms being the most common), and all you have to do is keep them misted and moist. Then you can harvest fresh, tasty, nutrient-dense homegrown mushrooms right in your kitchen! Mushroom kits also make for an awesome gift, or cool science experiment to do with the kids.




12) Learn Something New


I don’t know about you, but I have stacks of gardening books and magazines that I can’t seem to find the time to read – especially during the busy growing season! Take advantage of the slow, short, darker days of winter and learn something new. 

Read up on the benefits of no-till gardening, how to make homemade aloe vera fertilizer or use mycorrhizae to improve plant health, or how to grow something new and unique – like turmeric or pineapple guava. We have hundreds of articles here on Homestead and Chill that may tickle your fancy! Or, check out our list of favorite gardening books and homesteading resources here. 


A stack of various garden books sit on a wooden surface at the foot of of plot various plants such as sage, lavender, and aloe vera. There are gravel pathways with pavers as well. Cut flowers such as calendula, zinnia, and coneflower are garnishing the stack of books in front of and on top of the stack.
Reading is one of my favorite winter garden activities. Here are just a few of our favorite garden and homesteading books!


13) Build a Birdhouse or Owl Box


Calling all bird lovers! Even if you’re not a bird nerd like me, building a birdhouse is a sweet little winter garden project – and one your local wildlife will greatly appreciate too. We recently converted an old wooden mailbox into a birdhouse! Check out this great round-up of DIY birdhouses and plans from The Spruce for more ideas.

Or, if you want to step it up a notch, consider building an owl box! In return for providing them with shelter, these majestic birds of prey can offer excellent natural rodent control for your garden. You can find owl box plans online from trusted bird experts – like this Screech owl box plan from the Cornell Wildlife Center, or this Barn owl box from the Audubon Society. Be sure to research what types of owls are most common to your area, since different owl species like particular box shapes and sizes.


A birdhouse is in focus in a trees canopy while another birdhouse is out of focus in the background some distance away. Setting up birdhouses or owl boxes is a great winter garden activity to do for the birdwatchers out there.


14) Attend or Organize a Seed Swap


Us gardeners tend to hoard seeds. Hey, no judgement here! Yet if you’re like me, we don’t always use up the entire seed pack before they start to get old. (You can still plant and grow most old seeds, though the germination rate will start to decline after a few years). Seed swaps are an excellent way to get rid of extra seeds, discover new-to-you varieties, and spread the garden love. 

Seed swaps can operate a few different ways. Sometimes you can bring whatever you want, and take whatever you want. Others have more organized rules, where each participant exchanges the same number of packs or varieties with others in the group. Check with your local garden clubs or Master Gardeners extension office about upcoming seed swap events. Or organize your own – including through the mail!


15) Decorate Your Pots


Feeling crafty? Decorating pots is a fun winter garden project that you can do indoors. Grab some plain terra cotta pots and get creative! You could paint them with pretty designs, or even adorn them with a mosaic tile pattern. Check out this tutorial on How to Make Mosaic Flower Pots from Home is Where the Boat Is. Hunting down mosaic materials (e.g. old plates or china) sounds like a fabulous excuse to go thrift shopping too!


A coleus and foxglove plant are pictured in pots that have been adorned with mosaic style tiles of various shapes and colors.
Image courtesy of Home is Where the Boat Is


16) Build Something “Inside”


If it’s too cold, wet, or snowy to comfortably work outside, make use of your garage or other outbuildings as a workspace! During rainy winter weather, we’ve built raised garden beds, greenhouse benches, and a potting bench inside our garage – all ready and waiting for spring. This season we’ve been staying dry inside a small barn while we work on a big irrigation project, cutting and gluing certain smaller sections of PVC pipe in advance. I would love to build a produce washing station next!


17) Deep Clean Your Greenhouse


The final winter garden project on this list is for those of you that have a greenhouse. Freshen up your greenhouse in preparation for spring by organizing pots, seedling supplies, tools, or other items you store inside. Wipe down the interior walls and shelves with a natural sanitizing agent to kill any lingering disease or fungal spores from the previous season. We don’t have a greenhouse at the moment, but liked to use this homemade vinegar and citrus spray to clean our old one! 


The inside of a small greenhouse is shown, there are benches surrounding three walls of the greenhouse. There are small pots, seedling cell pack, seedling trays, and lids that are neatly laid out to dry after they have been sanitized. This is a great winter garden activity to do in between seasons.
Cleaning our old greenhouse used to be one of my favorite winter garden activities. It felt SO good and fresh afterwards. I miss this special space!


And that concludes this list of wonderful winter garden activities!


Well friends, what do you think? Did you see a few fun things on this list that you want to try? Or, did a miss any winter garden activities that you personally love to do to inside during the dreary cold months? Let me know in the comments below. If you found this list to be useful, please spread the love by pinning or sharing this post. As always, we greatly appreciate you tuning in today. I hope these ideas make it a little easier to get through the rest of winter. Don’t worry, spring is just around the corner!



DeannaCat signature, keep on growing

6 Comments

  • PJ

    I love your website and all the great ideas, information and guides you provide. Since being diagnosed with stage 4 osteoporosis, my activities that I used to enjoy are not ones I can do now due to possibility of bone fracture so easily, but I always enjoy planting vegetables and flowers but it got rather difficult since I cannot lift more than 5 pounds. So, My husband is finishing up a greenhouse build for me which he has never done before, but it is beautiful, and a 25 foot outdoor raised bed where I can enjoy outdoor activity and not be cooped up in the house all the time. He has put a potting bench in the greenhouse so I can germinate and sow all year round. I am a new at a lot of this, but last weeks planning guide and all the information in the download was a great resource. I have used your notes information and created my guide by zone, organized my seeds, and have a chart of each of all seeds, generation info, etc. Your guide was extremely helpful. I will see what works in my greenhouse and outside, but very excited to refer to your information. I feel much more confident in planting in my greenhouse and raised beds, along with the pots I normally plant in. Now when I create my food dishes for my recipes, I will use more and more of my home grown items. Thank you! Oh, and my old china tea cups will now become decorations for my pots in the greenhouse!!!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi PJ, thank you very much for the kind words and we are glad that you found the Grow Guide so helpful. I am so sorry to hear about your diagnosis but that is absolutely amazing that you will have a new space to play in and enjoy! It sounds like the greenhouse and raised bed should allow for plenty of flowers, vegetables, and whatever else you feel like growing. Wishing you the best of luck this growing season in your new space and have fun growing!

  • Becca

    These are great ideas! Just found your site after getting into gardening during the pandemic. Started with tomato and pepper plants just from home depot last year, going to try seeds this year (that seed organizer looks so nice)!

    Also the aerogarden hydroponic grower is awesome! Great for beginners/lazies like me, since the lights/indicators remind you when to add plant food and water and it’s not that often. But I need to learn to harvest/prune way more often, cause they grow like crazy and some of the herbs were even growing past the lights and into the cabinets in my kitchen haha.

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