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The Easy Way to Start a Vegetable Garden | Home

By TomJohnson
Total views: 18
Word Count: 515














The first step to starting a new vegetable garden is to map out your garden. Simply draw up an approximate plan of where you'd like everything to go, keeping as close to scale as possible. Make sure you take into account paths and such.

Now you need to make some decisions about what you'd like to grow. Make a list of your choices while keeping in mind what's readily available from your local plant nursery. Try to avoid any unusual vegetables, they can often be expensive, hard to get or hard to grow.

Map out where you'd like all of your plants to go in your garden. Be sure to plan carefully, because improper planning can lead to disasters later. Once you develop your plan, it's very important to stick to it.

Put a lot of thought into your vegetable plants requirements. You need to know you're planting your chosen vegetables in the best position for maximum growth. For example, learn which ones tolerate shade and which ones require full sun.

What if you have limited space? The French have an ingenious way of making full use of a small vegetable garden. You plant fast and slow growing vegetables together. This simply means that you mix something like packets of spinach and carrot seeds with each other.

Then you'd make a 1/2 inch deep furrow in a row and sow the mixture of the two seeds into that furrow and cover. The spinach will grow quickly and open up the soil so the carrot seeds can germinate better.

You can harvest some young spinach in approximately 4 weeks, which starts to thin it out to give the carrots room. You'll find that as the carrots begin to mature, the spinach will be almost finished and you'll have a bountiful harvest of succulent carrots.

This method can successfully be used for many different types of vegetables. Radishes can be planted well with lettuce or parsley, for example. The French will often sow early radish varieties with lettuce and turnips all at the same time.

The radishes grow extremely quickly, and are gone by the time the lettuce starts to mature. Then the turnips don't get large until the lettuce has been harvested. If you're planting your rows in an east-west orientation, you should plant all of your taller plants on the north side.

This is to ensure that the taller plants don't block the sunlight from reaching shorter plants. Corn is the tallest plant that is normally grown in vegetable gardens, so it should always be placed where it won't block sunlight from other plants.

You can also creatively use larger plants to shade shorter plants that don't do well in harsh sunlight. For example, you could grow delicate cool-weather spinach behind large, bushy beans or peas.

Using this strategy enables you to have a harvest of vegetables you might think you can't grow, just by being careful with where you place them. So if you don't have any shade in your vegetable garden for any shade loving plants you want to grow, create your own!

About the Author

Want to fill your small garden with flowers and fragrance? Tom Johnson has a Free Report for you titled Container Gardening Secrets.


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