Saturday, April 3, 2010

Vegetable Garden Layout

Vegetable Garden Layout

When you have picked your tools up, dug and planted some seeds, doesn’t mean that you have started your home vegetable garden. Vegetable garden layout is a vital component in your planning. Plant selection, planting plan, and garden location are major things to consider for your vegetable garden layout.

Planting plant is the next step in vegetable garden layout. To get best result, you can do it in this way:

Northern hemisphere; in order not shade the rest of the vegetable crops, so you can plant there – on the north side of the vegetable garden - tall crops such as corn, peas, and beans.

In the center; you can plant any mediums sized crops such as broccoli, squash, cabbage, pumpkins, cauliflower, and tomatoes.

At the very southern end one, you can plant there lettuce, radishes, beets, onions, carrots, and any other low growing crops.

You have to do this ways instead of making the rows run west and east merely to avoid first row tending to shade the second row, the second row tends to shade the third and so forth. And at the end, a better harvest every time is the result of proper planning in your vegetable garden layout you’ve done at first. When planning step goes right, then gardening care is a lot easier for you to do.

No comments:

Post a Comment