Vegetable Garden Design – Choosing the Right Layout for Your Garden

July 9th, 2015 | by admin

9 Comments

  1. Kathy Hirsch says:

    so many good advise thanks
    can u tell me please where can i found the garden planer

  2. Good reminder about beds..

  3. Xenodike says:

    does he app give you a warning when you plan planting something together
    that doesn’t get along? and does it give you suggestions on companion
    planting? :)

  4. Thank you for the wonderful tips. This will be my first time planting a
    raised garden. I normally buy plants already started in large containers
    which is expensive. 

  5. I love your videos, there is always some little gem I pick up from them!
    I personally try to do raised beds that are not restricted by building
    wooden edges around. I simply pick up soil from where the paths will be
    that year and pile it on where the plants will grow. This has saved my
    early-spring seedlings a couple of times when there was too much rain and
    the paths were flooded. I am very conscious of rotating my crops, so at the
    end of the season I cover the entire plot with well-rotted horse manure and
    leave it to over-winter. In the spring I make new paths and new beds and
    try not to disturb the soil (I try to do the no-dig method as much as
    possible, since I believe there are different organisms at different depths
    in the soil that shouldn’t be disturbed by digging and turning the soil
    over; the manure gets dug in by earthworms throughout the season as well as
    getting the root vegetables out of the soil once they are ready for
    harvest). This way I can utilize the minerals that are in the soil where
    the paths were in the following year. :) Let me know your thoughts on my
    method. :)

  6. I recycle polystyrene spools, that originally held wire for computer
    components into birdhouses. I make two styles: One gets a screw eye in the
    “roof” for hanging, and the other gets a dowel in the “floor” to sit into a
    hold drilled in the top of a post. the main modification is two plywood
    discs about 3/16″ thick, painted black, and attached with nuts and bolts
    for the roof and floor of the house.

  7. Helpful video. Thanks.

  8. I may sound silly but, I’d like to ask: is there a way for carrots, onions
    and other similar vegetables to reproduce themselves on their own and how?
    Some links please you are bored to write to me. Thank you.

  9. Nikki Likes says:

    Very Cool! So helpful!

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