Garden: How to develop a plan for your vegetable garden this season (2024)

Mike Hogan| Special to The Columbus Dispatch

It is April, and once the soil dries out and the warmer weather comes back, vegetable gardeners will be out workingthe soil and planting cool-season vegetables.Some of you are also tending to seedlings of cool and warm-season vegetables, which you have started indoors.

You have purchased your seeds for the warm-season vegetables you will plant next month, and you are all ready to get started growing vegetables.Or are you? Do you have a plan for your vegetable garden this season?It's easy to be excited about the season now, the real challenge is to sustain that excitement through September, when your neck is sunburned and the skin on your hands is green from pulling weeds.

Before you jump garden boots-covered feet-first into the garden this spring, think about developing a plan for your vegetable garden by answering these questions:

How will you control weeds?

Weeds challenge many vegetable gardeners.Now is a good time and think about the weed-management challenges you have faced in previous seasons and develop a plan to keep those weeds under control in your vegetable garden this season. Will you depend on organic control methods to keep these weeds under control, or will you depend on herbicides?

Remember that mulches are one of the most effective weed control tactics we can employ in the vegetable garden. There are many benefits to applying mulch to the vegetable garden, and perhaps the greatest benefit of mulch is weed control, particularly between rows and between transplants.

Organic mulches, such as straw, paper, cardboard, cover-crop residues, leaves and wood chips provide the added benefit of adding organic matter to the soil as they decompose.

How much fertilizer do you need to apply?

Do you know exactly how much fertilizer or lime you need to apply to your vegetable garden this year?While we know the approximate amount of macronutrients needed by certain vegetable crops, the only method for figuring out how much of those nutrients are available in your soil this season is to have your soil tested.

Early spring is a good time to have the soil tested.Soil testing information is available at go.osu.edu/franklinsoiltesting.

More: Have you tested your garden soil? Here's what you should know

Many native soils in Greater Columbus are naturally high in pH and rarely require the addition of lime, as most vegetable crops require slightly acidic soils with a pH of 6.5 to 6.8.

Do you need to amend your soil?

No matter the type or texture of the soil present in your garden, the addition of compost and other organic matter can improve the health of your soil and improve water-holding capacity and root penetration.

Soils high in clay or shale can benefit the most from the addition of organic matter. If you don’t already have a compost pile, consider starting one this season so you can recycle the nutrients and organic matter from your garden.

Has the size of your garden overwhelmed you in previous seasons?

Have you purchased too many vegetable seeds this year? Many gardeners buy more seeds than they need, or too many different vegetables, and if they plant all of these seeds, the garden may become overwhelming at some point.

If you’ve experienced this in previous seasons, consider cutting back the size of your planting, or even reducing the number of different vegetables you grow.Determine which vegetables are your absolute favorites and rotate other vegetables out of the garden this season. While gardening is hard work, it should also be satisfying and enjoyable to the gardener.

What is your plan for irrigation?

While we always hope for adequate rainfall throughout the entire growing season, there will always be certain times each year when the vegetable gardener will need to irrigate the garden.What is your plan for watering?Have you considered setting up some type of trickle irrigation system?

Even a simple soaker hose is an effective way to supply soil moisture for your plants. Drip-irrigation systems and soaker hoses are the most effective tools for delivering water efficiently to the root zone of plants.Avoid the use of overhead sprinklers as they create the perfect environment for the development of pathogens, which cause plant diseases.

What is your insect-management plan?

Most gardeners know there are good bugs and bad bugs in the vegetable garden, and maintaining populations of good bugs can often keep the populations of bad bugs below levels where they cause widespread damage to plants. Most synthetic insecticides can kill the good bugs, along with the bad bugs.

Gardeners who wish to manage insects in the vegetable garden should consider using an integrated-pest-management approach where you continually scout the garden for pests and then use cultural and biological controls to keep populations of harmful pests low.

The use of synthetic insecticides in the vegetable garden should only be used when cultural and biological controls fail to keep insect populations below levels at which they cause significant damage.

How will you measure your success this season?

What’s your plan for fun in the garden this year?Are you planting some vegetables that you have never grown before?What vegetable or variety are you most excited to grow this season? Gardening should be fun, so think about what gives you the most joy in your garden and do more of that! And also, have a plan for addressing the challenges that are certain to crop up this season.

Mike Hogan is Extension Educator, Agriculture and Natural Resources and associate professor with Ohio State University Extension.

hogan.1@osu.edu

Garden: How to develop a plan for your vegetable garden this season (2024)

FAQs

Garden: How to develop a plan for your vegetable garden this season? ›

The plan should include the following information: garden size, space between rows and within rows, crops and varieties, planting dates, seeded crops, and transplanted crops. Consider planning for spring planting of early crops and later plantings for late summer and autumn harvest.

How do I design my vegetable garden layout? ›

As a general rule, put tall veggies toward the back of the bed, mid-sized ones in the middle, and smaller plants in the front or as a border. Consider adding pollinator plants to attract beneficial insects that can not only help you get a better harvest, but will also prey on garden pests.

How do I make a garden plan? ›

Make a plan of the garden

It's really good to have a rough plan of what you want down on paper. Measure up your space and then mark out where you want the different functions to be. It's also a good time to think about different routes and paths that you'd like around your garden.

What order should I plant my vegetable garden? ›

Successive Crops

In early spring, grow lettuce, greens (such as arugula), peas, radishes, carrots, and broccoli. After you've harvested your cool-weather crops, plant hot-weather favorites, such as tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, and herbs. In fall, you can harvest potatoes, cabbage, and kale.

What veggies to plant next to each other? ›

Which Vegetables Grow Well Together?
VegetableCompanion Plant
Cabbage Family (cabbage, broccoli, kale, Brussels sprouts)Beets, celery, dill, Swiss chard, lettuce, spinach, onions, potatoes
CarrotsBeans, tomatoes
CeleryBeans, tomatoes, cabbages
CornCucumber, melons, squash, peas, beans, pumpkin
11 more rows
Jun 26, 2021

What is the traditional row vegetable garden layout? ›

The traditional method of vegetable gardening is to plant in narrow rows, lining up single plants in long rows separated by 1 to 2 feet of bare soil to provide access for weeding and other maintenance tasks.

What is the layout of a garden? ›

Your garden layout should be planned based on factors including location, sun exposure, and the types of plants you'd like to grow. You'll plan the size and type of beds according to whether it's a vegetable garden, herb garden, flower garden, or a low maintenance spaced primarily designed as an outdoor living area.

How do you make a garden grid? ›

A popular method involves placing stakes or screws at one foot intervals around your bed and using tomato twine to act as the visual divider. This method is especially useful if you plan on removing the grid later on in the growing season.

What are the principles of garden design? ›

The principles of landscape design include the elements of unity, scale, balance, simplicity, variety, emphasis, and sequence as they apply to line, form, texture, and color. These elements are interconnected.

What month is best to plant vegetable garden? ›

The two major planting periods, however, are spring (March to May) and fall (mid-July to September). The spring plantings are harvested in June and July, while the fall plantings are harvested from October to December.

How many vegetables should I plant in my garden? ›

How many vegetable to plant for a family
Vegetable cropPlants per 1 personPlants per 4 People
Peas15 to 2060 to 80
Peppers1 to 31 to 12
Potatoes4 to 612 to 24
Radishes10 to 1560
18 more rows
Mar 12, 2018

Can I plant tomatoes and peppers together? ›

The short answer is yes. As long as you keep pests at bay and remember that tomatoes and peppers do not have the exact same nutritional needs. They can however be pruned and trellised in more or less the same way except that some tomato varieties grow a lot taller than peppers.

What plants to avoid with peppers? ›

Potatoes and Tomatoes

Peppers, potatoes, and tomatoes are all part of the nightshade family. You'll want to avoid planting these family members close to each other because "they share common pests and diseases, increasing the risk of infestation and spread," says O'Neill.

What not to plant next to cucumbers? ›

Both potatoes and cucumbers are susceptible to the same diseases, such as blight, and can spread the disease to each other. Tomatoes: Tomatoes are not a good companion plant for cucumbers because they can attract pests like aphids and whiteflies that can also attack cucumber plants.

Is it better to plant vegetables in rows or groups? ›

If you have the space for it, row gardening allows you to plant more and harvest more vegetables. Squares are limited because if they are too big, you can't reach the plants in the middle. You are also limited in the amount of plants/veggies you can grow in the given space. Get good weed cover with wide rows.

Is there an app for square foot gardening layout? ›

Garden Planner for Vegetables, Herbs, and Flowers

Whether you want to create a square-foot garden for vegetables, a kitchen garden for herbs, or a beautiful flower garden, our Garden Planner will help you find the best layout for your space- plus provide all your planting and harvesting dates!

How wide should vegetable garden rows be? ›

For most tillers, rows should be at least 36 inches wide. This way you can go back between the rows and lightly cultivate for weed control until the crop starts to fill in between the rows. For most crops such as beans, corn, tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, okra, peas and squash, 36-inch row spacing would be the minimum.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kerri Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 6554

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (47 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kerri Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1992-10-31

Address: Suite 878 3699 Chantelle Roads, Colebury, NC 68599

Phone: +6111989609516

Job: Chief Farming Manager

Hobby: Mycology, Stone skipping, Dowsing, Whittling, Taxidermy, Sand art, Roller skating

Introduction: My name is Kerri Lueilwitz, I am a courageous, gentle, quaint, thankful, outstanding, brave, vast person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.