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Learn the basics of planning a square-foot garden (SFG). Grow more in less space by densely planting in squares. Find out the pros and cons, whether square-foot gardening really works, the ideal size and depth that a square-foot garden should be, and more tips. Plus, discover six SFG garden plans to reference.
What Is Square-Foot Gardening?
Square-foot gardening (SFG) is a type of raised-bed gardening鈥攂asically, a raised box divided into squares. With the square-foot gardening method, you plant in 4x4-foot blocks instead of traditional rows. Different crops are planted in different blocks according to their size; for example, 16 radishes in one square foot, or just one cabbage per square foot. A lattice is laid across the top to separate each square foot.
This planting method was developed by American author and TV presenter Mel Bartholomew in the 1970s. It鈥檚 a simple way to create easy-to-manage gardens with raised beds that need minimum maintenance time. SFG advocates claim it produces more, uses less soil and water, and takes much less time to maintain than a traditional garden.
Mel Bartholomew had just retired as an engineer and decided to take up gardening as a hobby. It was only natural that he would apply his analytical skills to the problems he encountered. In particular, he found the average gardener was spending hours weeding the big gaps between long rows of plants, creating unnecessary work for themselves. It soon became clear that getting rid of rows and using intensive deep beds could dramatically cut the amount of maintenance the garden required. Add a one-foot square grid on top, making it easy to space and rotate crops.
What Size Is a Square-Foot Garden Bed?
Typically, SFG beds are at least 4 feet by 4 feet, with a square foot lattice placed on top to visually separate the crops. That said, the beds can be 2x 2 feet or 4x12 feet, but the most common is 4x4 feet. This allows plants to be situated more closely together.
To keep the planting simple, there are no plant spacings to remember. Instead, each square has either 1, 4, 9, or 16 plants in it, depending on the size of the plant鈥攅asy to position in each square by making a smaller grid in the soil with your fingers. As an exception to this, there are a few larger plants that span two squares. Climbing peas and beans are planted in two mini-rows of 4 per square.
How Deep Is a Square-Foot Garden Bed?
Beds should be deep鈥攂etween 6 and 12 inches in depth to give plants plenty of rich nutrients, while still maintaining good drainage.
Other Square-Foot Gardening Rules
A specific soil mix, which is water-retentive and nutrient-rich, is used to fill the beds. This provides a weed-free start as well as being water-retentive and full of nutrients. The rich soil enables plants to be grown much more closely than normal, which in turn crowds out weeds.
Thin with Scissors: Instead of pulling up excess plants (which can disturb the root systems of the plants you want to grow), snip them off with scissors.
Never walk on the soil in the bed, as this will only compact the soil. Back in the 1970s, this was a revolutionary idea!
Pros of Square-Foot Gardening
The 鈥減ros鈥 for SFG are primarily ease and simplicity. SFG is a great method for new gardeners, people who have little time, the elderly or disabled (SFG gardens can be built at a raised height to make them more accessible), and children. Many schools have embraced the SFG method because it鈥檚 easy to install and maintain without becoming an additional burden for the teacher.
Cons of Square-Foot Gardening
Although many vegetables can be grown in SFG gardens, they struggle to accommodate larger plants (squash, melons, main-crop potatoes, etc.), perennials (globe artichokes, rhubarb), and fruit bushes/trees. Once new gardeners experience the success of SFG gardens, they often want to expand the range of crops they grow beyond the standard SFG crops.
Originally, a soil mixture of peat moss, vermiculite, and compost (鈥淢el鈥檚 Mix鈥) was recommended in SFG. While this makes excellent soil for vegetables, two of the three ingredients come from non-renewable sources. Peat takes thousands of years to develop and is a valuable natural sink for greenhouse gases. Vermiculite is mined and is therefore also a non-renewable resource with a significant carbon footprint. In common with many gardeners, we have moved toward using coconut coir instead of peat or vermiculite.
The specific soil mix and raised beds can be more expensive to set up than alternative methods, even though SFG is easier to maintain.
None of these reasons prevent SFG from being a useful part of a garden, though! You can use 100% recycled compost in the beds instead of Mel鈥檚 Mix, gradually build up the number of SFG beds and combine it with areas of your garden which are set aside for fruit trees and larger crops. Many of the SFG techniques that were revolutionary in the 1980s are now commonly used for vegetable gardening: deep raised beds, not compacting soil, removable covers and plant supports, etc.
Does Square-Foot Gardening Work?
Yes, square-foot gardening works for those who have limited space because it allows plants to be situated more closely together. Also, we have definitely found that there is less weeding. If you don鈥檛 have a lot of time available to weed, water, and maintain your vegetable garden, then square-foot gardening could be the answer. Finally, SFG has the benefits of all raised beds in that the soil warms more quickly for earlier planting and harvest.
However, there are limitations in what you can grow. As said above, plants that need more space such as corn, potatoes, watermelon, and pumpkins do not fare as well in boxes.
Square-foot gardening was revolutionary when it was first invented and it鈥檚 still a great system for people who are starting out, have limited space, or want a highly organized method to follow. However, you don鈥檛 need to follow SFG to benefit from gardening with raised beds and good organization. There鈥檚 a great quote: 鈥淚f the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.鈥
SFG works really well for many situations, but it doesn鈥檛 fit everything. The success it brings can often lead people on to discovering the delights of fruit trees, using barrels to grow huge crops of potatoes, or managing a greenhouse full of high-value crops. It鈥檚 a great stepping-stone to the world of growing your own food and that鈥檚 why it鈥檚 still going strong 35 years later!
Video: See How to Set Up Your Square-Foot Garden
In this video, we introduce the thinking behind Square-Foot Gardening and explain everything you need to know to setup your own SFG garden beds including the best soil mix, plant spacing, positioning, companion planting and supporting structures to use.
Square-Foot Garden Plans
All of the SFG garden plans below were shared by 蜜桃恋人 readers!
1. Square-Foot Garden for an Apartment
鈥淚 live in a small apartment in the city but have a nice sized patio and wanted to take advantage of my space. This application helped me do it! My patio is outlined because it鈥檚 a little bit funny-shaped but everything with in the brown lines fits! The small red area is my back door and the larger red area is a shrub that I can鈥檛 do much with.鈥
Garden Size: 18鈥 7鈥 x 15鈥 11鈥 Garden Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin Sun or Shade: Partial Shade Garden Soil Type: Poor Soil
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2. Square-Foot Garden for a Home Garden
鈥淭his is my 鈥榗hef鈥檚 garden鈥 with lots of different veggies and fruit that we like to eat.鈥
Garden Size: 19鈥 11鈥 x 19鈥 11鈥 Garden Location: Denver, Colorado Sun or Shade: Partial Shade Garden Soil Type: Good Soil
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3. Large-Scale SFG Garden
鈥淩aised bed gardens with an emphasis on companion planting with the new tool. Soil is so-so but manure and compost and lime helped and will add more this year. Wondering about the problem of rotating crops next year but I hope the benefit of attracting beneficials will override that. I鈥檝e got a three sisters garden (corn, beans and squash) and onions planted everywhere to help ward off pests. There are all the flowers that attract beneficials that I could fit in. I think it will take a lot of time to plant - but I am looking forward to it! Using the plant list now to organize my seed starts - Onions and leeks and shallots are up and waving! I have notes on seed starting on my plant list page. NOTE: Since I wrote this I have made changes due to the groundhog, primarily putting all the onion family and many herbs/flowers where he came in last year.鈥
Garden Size: 27鈥 11鈥 x 33鈥 11鈥 Garden Location: Georgetown, MA 30x30 Town Garden Plot Sun or Shade: Sunny Garden Soil Type: So-So Soil
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4. Square-Foot Garden Plan for Home Garden
鈥淥rganic garden planted in raised beds made using 4鈥 fence wire (bent w/1鈥 sides and 2鈥 bottom), lined with landscape cloth, then filled with soil made up of Black Gold (a special mix from a Nashville Nursery), worm compost, peat moss, coir, several different composts, mushroom compost and rock dust.鈥
Garden Size: 29鈥 11鈥 x 39鈥 11鈥 Garden Location: Jamestown, TN Sun or Shade: Partial Shade Garden Soil Type: Good soil
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5. Square-Foot Garden for a Front Yard
鈥淥ur front focal point garden will have a ring of strawberries and is planned to grow in a 鈥渃one鈥 shape to tall sunflowers at the center.鈥
Garden Size: 19鈥 11鈥 x 19鈥 11鈥 Garden Location: Indianapolis, IN Sun or Shade: Partial Shade Garden Soil Type: Good soil
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6. Square-Foot Garden for a Front Yard
鈥淥rganic Vegetable Garden - Some traditional left but moving toward all square foot garden. Heavy clay soil amended for 3 years with horse manure, leaf humus, household compost, sand, wood chips, fish and organic fertilizer (includes chicken manure and minerals). Soil in square foot gardens according to Mel鈥檚 mix.鈥
Garden Size: 30鈥 11鈥 x 34鈥 9鈥 Garden Location: Cleveland, Ohio near Lake Erie Sun or Shade: Sunny Garden Soil Type: Good soil, organic
See full plant list and more details about this garden .
Our online garden planner tool offers an SFG mode that makes it easy to add one-foot squares of plants as well as using all the other powerful features of the software such as crop rotation, tracking varieties etc. Best of all is that the SFG plants can be part of a larger garden plan that includes more traditional planting layouts and large plants, so there鈥檚 the flexibility to combine different methods in a plan of a single garden area.
If you need help designing your vegetable garden, try our . We鈥檙e offering a free 7-day trial鈥攁mple time to play around and plan your first garden! We hope this software works for you.
Catherine Boeckmann loves nature, stargazing, and gardening so it鈥檚 not surprising that she and The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人 found each other. She leads digital content for the 蜜桃恋人 website, and is also a certified master gardener in the state of Indiana. Read More from Catherine Boeckmann
We planted a garden a few years ago and were devastated when the blight infected all of our beloved plants. We are going to try a small 4 x 4 raised garden box and going tmsimple with only tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and a few herbs. Any layout suggestions? I figure the cucumbers and tomatoes will go in the back on a trellis but that is my only plan
So, I have worked diligently on preparing 3 raised garden beds. I have sweet potatoes growing in one and cant wait to see how I did. Im a little iffy on how I made the soil up, but we shall see! Anyways, bed #2 I feel very confident in the soil and want to do it the Sq Ft way. I have it planned out, the bed is 7' X 3' and here is what I was looking to plant:
back row: 4 sweet corn ea sq. = 28 bantam corn
middle: 8 bush bean ea sq, X2 sq = 16 Tendergreen beans
middle: 8 lima bean ea sq, X2 sq = 16 Henderson Limas
middle: 9 turnips ea sq, X3 sq = 18 Shogoin Turnips
front: 16 carrots ea sq, X3 sq = 48 Scarlet Nantes
front: 1 buttercrunch lettuce ea sq, X2 sq = 2 heads
front: 4 black seeded simpson lettuce, X1 sq = 4
front: 4 ruby leaf lettuce, X1 sq = 4
I was looking to just upload a pic of my drawing, but there it is..... So now the curve ball, I live in southwest florida..
Does this plan sound/look like it will work? I have one more bed im still filling and plan to plant spinach, kale, other veggies that may do better when it kinda cools down, down here.
This is an ambitious plan! We salute you! With the understanding that every garden, even for the most experieced among us, we think that a lot of it will work. One consideration: Corn is best pollinated in multiple rows, or blocks. You may not have adequate depth/number of rows to prouce ears. Your beans might be crowded in the space allowed. Crowded plants are not as prolific/heavy producers. The rest sounds feasible. And by 鈥渂ack鈥 row, you mean the north end, correct? We wish you luck! Let us know how it goes.
I have planted a square foot garden befor but this time my soil is not good, do I have to dig it all out and fill it in with better dirt ?
I live in Sask zone 2
Consider that your soil is your groundwork, literally. So you want the dirt to be the best it can be鈥攔ich in compost, of suitabe pH (depending on the plants you plan to grow), not too sandy (or water and nutrients will run out), not too hard/clay-y (or it will not have the nutrients to support life鈥攏ever mind that the roots might not break through it).
So…you know best what your current soil is, what grew there before, what you want to grow. You can amend the existing soil鈥攁dd aged cow or horse manure and compost and mix it up. But consider that you might want to remove some of the existing 鈥渂ad鈥 soil to make room for this new stuff.
So, to your question: dig it ALL out?! Only you can really tell. Some, probably… Think of it this way: don’t set yourself up for the possibility that in six months you’ll wish you did something differently. Make it a great garden year from the ground up…now.