Growing Vegetables: A 7-Step Growing Plan

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Creating a grow plan can be pretty complicated, but it doesn’t have to be. Here's how to best go about planning your vegetable gardening.

Vegetable growing plan
It's worth creating a grow plan to keep things organized [Photo: Maria Evseyeva/ Shutterstock.com]

Which plants get along, how much space do they need and which location is ideal for growing vegetables? Anyone who grows vegetables in the garden for the first time is confronted with quite a lot of questions. It is therefore worth creating a cultivation plan beforehand in order to clarify all questions and to keep track of things. But here, too, are above all Beginner in vegetable growing quickly overwhelmed. It's not as complicated as it first seems. We show what you should consider and how you can create your own cultivation plan step by step.

contents

  • Growing vegetables: the right location
  • Growing plan for the vegetable garden: the right plants
  • Growing Vegetables: Separation or Mixed Culture?
  • Vegetable garden growing plan: timing
  • Growing vegetables: pay attention to the crop rotation

Growing vegetables: the right location

When you create a new vegetable garden, the first question to ask is the right location. Although you can grow vegetables almost anywhere with the right choice of plants, certain basic requirements make working in the garden much easier. Most vegetable plants prefer loose, well-drained and nutrient-rich soil in a sunny position. You should also consider the proximity to your house or at least to the nearest water connection when planning into account, because in the summer, lugging full watering cans can be a real burden will.

Vegetable growing location
When creating a new vegetable garden, location is key [Photo: Aleksandra H. Kossowska/ Shutterstock.com]

Once you have found the right place, enter the basic dimensions in your cultivation plan. Now it's about the right size of the individual beds within the garden: one has proven itself here Width of about 1.20 m, so you can also plant the vegetables in the middle from both sides reach. If you prefer rather wider beds, you should still divide them into about 1.20 m wide sections with a small path between them. In this way you can easily reach all plants without having to step into the individual rows. Draw the beds on your plan and don't forget other details, such as a wider path for the wheelbarrow or a place for a greenhouse.

Growing plan for the vegetable garden: the right plants

Now it's time to choose the right vegetable plants. Basically, grow what you like to eat. A kitchen garden is supposed to spoil us with delicacies and it is worth growing vegetables for that You like it - it would be a shame if the garden vegetables ended up in the bin because nobody ate them like. For the same reason, you should also consider how many plants you want to plant of one species and variety so that you don't have too much excess.

Different vegetables in bowl held by hands
Grow what you like in the vegetable garden [Photo: Yulia Grigoryeva/ Shutterstock.com]

Otherwise, beginner-friendly and robust plants are ideal, especially when planning your first vegetable garden: Herbs, salads, zucchini (Cucurbita pepo ssp. pepo convar. giromontiina), pumpkin (Cucurbita maxima, C moschata & C pepo), radish (Raphanus sativus var. sativus), beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) and leek (Alium ampeloprasum) easily forgive one or the other cultural error and are particularly uncomplicated to look after. Make a list of all the plants you want to grow this year and think about how big the area you want the plants to be. The planting distance of vegetable species cannot be generalized, because depending on growth and use, they require different distances. For a single zucchini plant, about one square meter should be calculated, while, for example carrots (Daucus carota subsp. sativus) only need a distance of 25 – 30 cm to other crops.

Tip: Growing vegetables is particularly easy with a special cultivation set. Our Plantura vegetable growing set contains everything you need to harvest five different colorful vegetables.

Growing Vegetables: Separation or Mixed Culture?

Now let's start assigning each type of vegetable its exact place. You have to keep in mind that not all plants get along with their neighbors. So which vegetables can you plant together? Often closely related varieties such as potatoes (Solanum tuberosum) and tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum) not, because both belong to the nightshade family (Solanaceae). On the one hand, they compete for nutrients, but on the other hand, both are affected by the same diseases and can transmit them to each other. In contrast, there is also a whole range of vegetables that even support each other in growth. carrots and onions (Allium cepa) are an excellent example: while the carrot fly (Psila rosae) can't stand the smell of the onion and prefers to keep their distance, the scent of the carrot drives the onion fly away (Delia antiqua) - so both protect each other from the unloved pests.

Arrangement in the bed vegetable cultivation
The arrangement of the beds is crucial - not every plant gets along [Photo: Marek P/ Shutterstock.com]

But not only carrots and onions are a good duo: celery (Apium graveolens) drives away cabbage pests, dill (Anethum graveolens) increases the germination of many plants and lettuce (Lactuca sativa var. capitata) and Kohlrabi (Brassica oleracea var. gongylodes) keep each other's pests at bay. Such effects are even stronger when the plants not only stand next to each other, but share a bed. So-called mixed cultures not only protect against diseases, but also protect the soil and take up less space. So now think about which plants are suitable as neighbors - so you can decide which ones Plants where to grow, and these combinations in the drawn floor plan of your garden enter.

Vegetable garden growing plan: timing

Many main crops require a pre-culture on the warm window sill long before it is warm enough outside to sow the vegetables. Plan in your time that particularly heat-loving species with a long growing season, such as tomatoes and melons (Cucumis melo & Citrullus lanatus), must be brought forward from mid-February. Pre- and post-cultures can be planted at precisely the times when the main crop cannot yet be planted out or has already been harvested. Particularly fast-growing vegetables how salads, radish or spinach (Spinacia oleracea) are perfect as a pre- or post-culture. So next, write down the periods of time that each major crop takes from sowing to need for harvest and consider whether you sow other vegetables before or after be able. Tomatoes, for example, usually only find their way into the vegetable garden after the ice saints from mid-May, so there is enough time before that Growing round radishes - sometimes there is even enough time for two or more because of the rapid growth of the pre- and post-crops To harvest. Also the Subsequent crops in autumn can bring a decent harvest again, especially in mild years. Cold-tolerant vegetables like Winter purslane (Claytonia), Lamb's lettuce (Valerianella locusta) and spinach are ideal as an autumn follow-up crop and also provide vitamins and fresh greens in the kitchen in the winter months.

Growing plan in the garden for vegetables
Lettuce is perfect as a pre- or post-culture [Photo: audaxl/ Shutterstock.com]

But not only fast-growing previous crops can share a bed with main crops, sometimes two main crops can be grown in the same year. A classic crop rotation between two main crops is, for example, the change from new potatoes to Kale (Brassica oleracea var. sabellica): As the early potato harvest begins as early as May, the kale has time to develop well into the winter and the bed remains occupied for most of the year. If you've also established the pre- and post-crops, it's worth making a separate schedule. In this you enter for each month which vegetables must be planted or sown and which plants are soon ready to be harvested - so you can see at a glance which tasks still have to be completed this month are.

Growing vegetables: pay attention to the crop rotation

It is important that you treat your soil with care so that your vegetable garden still promises a plentiful harvest in ten years' time. Growing just one species in monoculture can tire the soil within a few years and require extensive maintenance. Instead, one should work according to a rotation system in the vegetable garden: since different types of vegetables also make different demands on the soil and its nutrient supply, this does not make it one-sided overused. But even if the bed is often empty in winter and the vegetables have no direct contact with each other, not every plant is compatible with the plant of the previous year. Soil pests can sometimes remain in the soil for several years and thus also infest plants the next year if they are among their hosts. But diseases caused by fungal spores can also survive a winter in the bed. Therefore, plants that are particularly susceptible to the same diseases and pests should only be placed in the same bed at a certain distance from each other. This includes mainly related vegetables from the same plant family, such as tomato, paprika (Capsicum annum), aubergine (Solanum melongena) and potato. Also celery, carrots, fennel (Foeniculum vulgare) and parsnips (Pastinaca sativa) all belong to the umbelliferae family (Apiaceae) and do not get along well with each other.

Grow carrots in bed
Medium feeders like carrots are good for growing in the second year [Photo: elena moiseeva/ Shutterstock.com]

But the nutrient requirements of vegetable species should also be taken into account in the crop rotation: a rough distinction is made between heavy, medium and weak consumers. Heavy consumers - such as tomatoes or cabbage - have a high nutrient requirement and should therefore only be planted if the soil has been well prepared (e.g. with compost). At the same time, these plants often tolerate additional fertilizers in order to thrive properly. A primarily organic organic fertilizer like ours is ideal Plantura organic tomato fertilizer, which optimally supplies a wide variety of vegetables with nutrients.

In the following year it is advisable to grow medium-feeders, which benefit from the fertilizer application of the first year but do not remove as many nutrients from the soil as the heavy-feeders. Medium eaters include carrots, spinach and onions. In the third year the weak consumers are then - like almost all herbs, salads, radishes, beans and peas (Pisum sativum) – it’s the turn of those with the lowest nutritional needs. In the fourth year, the soil gets a closed season, only green manure is sown. It covers the soil and replenishes it with nutrients from the plants that die off in winter. So when designing next year's growing plan, divide your vegetables into the three groups and rotate the different beds so that the soil isn't monotonously used.

Vegetable Garden Growing Plan: Summary

Would you like to create a cultivation plan for your vegetable garden? Here is a brief overview of the necessary steps.

  1. Choose a suitable location for vegetable beds, paying attention to the soil conditions, sunlight and proximity to the nearest water connection.
  2. Divide your garden into beds. 1.20 m is considered a good width, with larger beds, paths should be taken into account.
  3. Make a list of all the plants you want in the garden. Also note that the number of plants should suit your needs.
  4. Allocate a bed to the individual plants. Note the respective planting distances of the individual species. Also, keep in mind that some vegetables are not good neighbors, while others support each other. A mixed culture can bring advantages with many plant combinations.
  5. Write down how long your main crops have been growing and consider adding a pre- and post-crop to get the most out of the bed.
  6. For a better overview, a list with the sowing and harvesting dates for each type of vegetable is helpful.
  7. Start planning next year's crop rotation. A heavy feeder should always be followed by a medium feeder and then a weak feeder so that the soil is not overloaded. Schedule a recovery year for the soil with cover manure every four years.

In most gardens, flower beds and vegetable beds are strictly separated. However, in our article you will find out what advantages it has, too Planting flowers in the vegetable patch.

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