The basics for success in any garden are knowing your sunlight, soil, and water. When you have an understanding of these, your gardening skills will flow.
Before you begin planning your garden you should decide what you’d like to grow. Tomatoes, peppers, lettuces, potatoes, and onions are popular choices and relatively easy to grow. Everyone has their favorites, but some, like Cauliflower and celery, require advanced skill. Do a little research and know what goes into growing your favorite veggies before starting. Here’s a list of 12 easy vegetables for your first garden.
Pardon the Beatles reference, but before you start your garden, you must know the path of the sun over your property. You’ll want to take note of where the day’s first rays of sunlight dance across your lawn, objects like trees or walls that cast shadows, and how late in the day direct sun still lights the proposed garden area. See this post for measuring your sun and shade with a smartphone app.
As mentioned above, you need 6-8 hours of direct sunlight daily on your vegetable patch, preferably from dawn until late afternoon. Early morning light is preferred, as it warms the soil quickly and dries wet foliage early in the day, which really cuts down on the potential for disease.
Direct sunlight means light contacts the leaves of the plant, not ambient light. Your best results will be in an area that receives light all day, but some late afternoon shade (after 4 PM assuming the garden is lit at sunrise) is beneficial in hot summers or during droughts.
Will you be flat earth gardening or using raised garden beds? if you’re one of the few who are blessed with perfect soil (dark and “loamy” – drains easily and is an earthy brown color), flat earth gardening should be fine. But if you live in an urban landscape or on top of hard clay soil, raised garden beds are the way to go. (You can also build raised beds on top of concrete.)
If you want to learn how to build a raised bed easily, see my post on building raised beds. For serious DIY-types, look here. I suggest using Cedar planks for the sides of your raised beds as they’ll last 10 years or more due to Cedar’s natural ability to resist rot (much of the wood will be perpetually wet on the inside). For optimal growing, position the raised bed on a south-facing axis perpendicular to the path of the sun. This orientation makes best use of direct sunlight all day and limits plant shadows inside the garden bed. This is not absolutely necessary, but it is optimal.
For flat earth gardens, know the quality of your soil before beginning. Vegetables and fruit all require soil with plenty of organic material. If your soil is dark brown, free of rocks, and water doesn’t pool in it after raining, it might be good for growing. Ultimately, only a soil test will tell you for sure, but good indicators are: a dark brown color, it doesn’t stick together in your hand when wet, and it has a nice, earthy smell.
Do not rototill your flat earth garden bed, as 1) it isn’t necessary; 2) digging or tilling breaks critical soil structure and displaces organisms; 3) it releases carbon captured by the soil; 4) it brings thousands of weed seeds to the surface which would otherwise lay dormant below.
In flat earth gardens or raised beds, use a stirrup hoe (aka a loop hoe) or a similar tool to rid the garden area of weeds. After planting, add 3 inches of compost to the garden bed. This will not only feed your plants but will smother any weed seeds as well. Learn why rototilling is the wrong thing to do.
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If you’re gardening in raised beds, fill them to the top with 1/3rd compost and 2/3rds topsoil. The mix will should settle to 2-3″ below the top when watered. The rule of thumb for any type of gardening is: feed the soil and you’ll feed the plant. If your soil mix and soil quality are excellent, your plants will be well taken care of.
Just say no to landscape fabric. One thing I do not recommend is adding landscape fabric to the bottom of raised beds unless you’re building on top of concrete or toxic soils. It’s not only completely unnecessary, but it can restrict water drainage, interfere with gas exchange, and restrict earthworm activity and beneficial insect movement through the soil. Learn why we rarely recommend using landscape fabric to prevent weeds.
Each plant has different requirements for spacing at its mature size. Do your research and know how much space should be provided between each. You’ll also get to know this better as your gardening skills grow. Proper space allows each plant to receive enough light, water, airflow, and nutrients for best growth.
You can also maximize your planting space using companion planting techniques like adding onions to the sunny edges of your tomatoes or peppers, or leafy greens in the shady areas. The idea is to leave as little open space aside the vegetables to minimize weeding and maximize your crop area. Learn about companion planting techniques.
Additional planting tips:
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