Garden along the road less traveled

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Starter Vegetable Garden

Starter Vegetable Garden

A small vegetable patch is one of the first gardens I made when I was a twenty-something. I hadn’t really gardened on my own, but I knew what a delicious treat a fresh homegrown tomato was… I had enjoyed them from my mother’s garden. And my mother’s vegetable gardens never changed very much from what is essentially an easy starter vegetable garden. So this little guide might serve you for your career as a gardener, or it might be a jump off point for a love affair with your own kitchen garden. It will provide some fresh produce for your dining table.

What does this starter vegetable garden look like?

It is small. This is the number one piece of advice beginning gardeners will always get, and it as often gets ignored. Still, small is not less, so try to keep your first vegetable garden a size that is easy to take care of. I think my first vegetable patch was four feet by five feet in the city backyard, next to the walkway back to the garage. It was in the sunshine, not shadowed by my house or the neighbor’s buildings or any trees.

My patch was a simple rectangle shape, easy to access for weeding and harvesting. As your interest and needs grow, you can always add more rectangles. Some people start out with raised beds, although I didn’t. The benefit of a raised bed is the good drainage, and the good soil it can provide for you, as you add amendments in a concentrated way. Less compaction because rarely does anyone walk inside their raised beds.

What vegetables should I grow?

Of course you can try any that you like, but I would encourage a new gardener to plant things that are easy to succeed with and give a good quality crop. The main motivation for growing food is to have something good to eat!

paste tomatoes

ripening on the sill

Tomatoes: because of their cost, and the poor quality of grocery store fruits, I would always have tomatoes in the starter garden. You might love the idea of heirlooms, and I do too… but the hybrids were bred for disease resistance. Nothing is more discouraging than dried up vines that got attacked by wilt. Why not have a plant of each? Better Boy is a very good hybrid, and Brandywine or Pink Caspian are a very good heirlooms. The actual choices in the nursery or seed companies are myriad. Need warm weather to grow.

Bush beans: although you can usually buy them fresh in the markets they are easy to grow and you might like some right outside your back door. Need warm weather to germinate and grow.

Peppers: sweet or hot, they don’t take much space and produce prolifically. Every starter garden should have a few pepper plants. They are easy to grow and take similar conditions to tomatoes (fertile soil, regular but not too much moisture.)

Green Leafy things: Grow spinach. It is good for you and very easy- it also grows in cooler weather. Leaf lettuces are easy, and mesclun mixes are too. Gourmet salads are in your future if you plant these. They need cooler temperatures. Swiss Chard- try this, it is something like spinach, is easy to grow, lasts better through hotter weather. Wonderful addition to quiche.

Radishes: radishes are just the simplest plant you can grow- they come up quickly and taste delicious in the cooler weather they love.

Green onions: early crop that is sown in spring for all sorts of uses; salads, eggs, and baked potatoes all are better for a bit of green onion! AKA “scallions”.






A row of herbs and a row of marigolds: because the herbs taste good and help your veggies taste better, and marigolds for repelling insects, but mainly because they look pretty. Easy herbs ( and VERY easy if you buy plants rather than seed) are Parsley, Savory, Chives, and Basil. Or should I say Basils, plural, because there are so many types- all good.

The starter garden how-to

I know what you are thinking- long list of vegetables and small spaces- how does all that cram into a tiny plot? A starter garden has tricks to accomplish all that. One is called “vertical” gardening, and one is interplanting. Make sure you stake the tomatoes, or tie them to a fence ( should your neighboring yard and yours have one). Tomatoes take the most space in this little garden.

Then, if you notice that some plants grow early in the season and don’t like warm weather, you can well imagine that you have harvested them by the time you plant the tomatoes and peppers. Swiss Chard and parsley like the shade that a tomato plant can provide them. Radishes are grown in among the lettuces- and are usually harvested before they are, but both grow happily together. Green onions are also harvested early, leaving spaces for beans or peppers. So you can see there are early and later crops grown out of the same space of ground.

Plantings of herbs and marigolds are around the edges of the garden or you can have them take the place of some of the early vegetables. Or here is an idea, place a couple big pots and seed them with marigolds and herb plants. Containers do take extra care to water, but have the advantage that you can move them wherever you want.

Things Missing

You can grow whatever you want, you don’t need my suggestions to try them, but more can go awry with carrots, and corn takes a large amount of space, as do pumpkins. And zucchini is the butt of many a joke for its huge harvests…

If you love zucchini or squash, think about vertical methods. If you have never tried growing a garden, I hope you attempt this little starter vegetable garden or the easy herb garden. I believe you will be successful and you might find out how much fun it is to grow things to eat.

Look into more information:
Use good bugs to protect your garden from the destructive ones.

Grow your own food.

Starting a vegetable garden…

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