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subject: Learn The Essential Things In Planning Vegetable Garden Design [print this page]


In the world of agriculture, the advantages of a raised garden are widely accepted; from effective prevention of erosion to insect control to the custodial ease, this is a concept that you can apply to your vegetable garden.

As compared to the process of designing and implementing a conventional vegetable garden, that of a raised garden is not all that different...

If one or more edges of your plot end in a raised surface, like a wall, then the raised garden philosophy recommend you install a trellis there and plant under it items which will climb the trellis.

You can really get ambitious when you go with a raised garden, because you spend less time dealing with garden pests and plant diseases, and you can more quickly and more easily gauge watering status.

Your taller growing plants should be planted centrally while your shorter plants should go towards the perimeter. This makes it much easier to tend to the lot of them.

Plant leaf lettuce and radishes in the same spot and time frame so that when the lettuce is ready to be collected, then the radishes will be well entrenched.

Lettuce and radishes will do quite nicely at the edges of your plot; nevertheless, don't neglect the more humble items such as herbs; make sure they have a place in your design.

If you fancy some sort of potato in your garden, then locate them at the rows' ends. Tending to them here will be much easier than if they are located elsewhere. And it will permit you to focus on them as you mound them up.

If your design includes easily removable edges, then harvesting your potato crop should be quite a bit easier.

Plant your early-season, rapid growers at the beginning of the growing season and all in the same place. This will allow you to add your late-season items without perturbing your producing plants.

That is why careful garden planning is so crucial. Don't get carried away with the design. Make a simple layout design on a piece of paper.

Modify it until you feel you have made the most efficient use of the space you have.

This is the reason that intelligent garden planning is so important. You don't have to get elaborate; just sketch out a basic plot layout on a piece of notebook paper.

Do you think the tomato plants will shoot up over the onions, depriving them of sunlight? Or will your tomato plants, having started out in a pot, be picked and clear of the sunlight stream when the onions need it most?

Will that spectacular squash or zucchini take over your garden, or will they fill in after your early yielding items have wrapped up? And do you really want THAT many zucchinis? You would better go for variety than quantity when you decide what to plant.

Sure it's easier, but don't settle for one type of tomato. And put in a good variety of greens, including leaf and bib lettuce, cabbage, chard, mustard and collard greens, kale, and whatnot.

You won't find yourself with so much of one crop that you lose any variety in your diet.

by: Michael Joseph




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