The Basics of Planting and Growing a Vegetable Garden
Getting Started
Planning For a Garden
Planting a Garden
Plant Growing and Care
Harvesting and Storing Vegetables
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I was looking at some figures earlier this year of daily hours of sunshine in the UK. In our main growing months, April, May, June, July, August, we got an average of just about 6 hours a day.
The weather stations recording these figures would be on the top of tall buildings or in wide open spaces and get every minute of available sunshine every day. Most home gardeners will have shadow to contend with as the sun moves behind buildings, trees and over the hill. I don't think we need 6 hours of sunshine each day to grow vegetables which is just as well because I don't think we get anything like that.
One of our editors is from England. The number of sunlight hours by crop can vary but fruiting vegetables (tomatoes, peppers, aubergine, cucumbers, squash, etc) do indeed require 8 hours. This is why many British start and grow tomatoes and peppers in a greenhouse or they’ll never ripen colorfully. However, root vegetables can deal with six hours of sunlight per day and leafy cool-weather green vegetables can operate on 4 hours a day and partial sun. For a beginner, we advice 8 hours as a general rule as this allows all popular crops (such as tomatoes) to thrive.
Dear Catherine,
Greetings from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. I thank you for a thoroughly enjoyable and succinct read. A nice captivating intro. Well thought out and it's evident that you're well experienced. This is important for the whole world as everyone's lives change with Covid-19. I can understand the comment by Linda from Germany as many city dwelling folk around the planet live in high-rise apartments. There are definitely resources for that but for me, as i read through your article, many memories of my Dads' garden in my childhood showed up. I remembered the feel of soil under my toes and in my small hands, the smell of top-soil mixing with water and different vegetable leaves. I remember the sunlight coming through the canopy and shining on me. Thank you for the lessons and the memories. Best wishes, Jason.
Hello, I really enjoyed reading your article about vegetable gardening for beginners, I found it very helpful. Thank you, Richard
Hi I'm a beginner gardener, and this article was really very helpful! Thanks so much!
I can't believe I'm just now reading this article! The minute that I realized (back in mid February) that coronavirus would slow down food production/distribution and of course make it harder for me to take daily trips to the grocery store for fresh goodies depending on my mood, I decided it was time to start a garden. We are starting a deck garden to keep plants away from critters until we decide whether or not I have a green thumb. I have been surfing the web and asking farmer friends for MONTHS about starting a garden, but I could never find exactly what I was looking for. "How far apart do I plant veggies? What can be grown in the same bed/like toddlers, does anyone have to be separated? How much space do I need? What kind of soil do I use? Are there certain veggies I should by as seedlings instead of seeds?" This one article answered more of my questions at once than all of my research so far.
Brianna, We really appreciate your kind words and the time you took to comment鈥攁nd shared with our tiny team here! The 蜜桃恋人’s been around a long time so this page was created after hearing the most common questions from our readers! We’re so pleased that it helped you start a garden! That’s our goal here鈥攖o help everyone grow a little (or a lot!) of their own food! It’s smart that you are doing a lot of planning because some upfront planning is probably the most important step, especially when it comes to soil preparation and pest prevention. You can’t just throw seeds down and hope for the best. If you have more questions, let us know. We don’t get to every comment ourselves but we have a wonderful community of gardeners. Stay patient. Gardening is a never-ending learning cycle and we’re always learning ourselves! Also, you might appreciate our Garden Planner tool because it actually calculates those spacing questions for you and so much more. It’s free for 7 days, plenty of time to play around on your computer. .
Sincerely, The Old Farmer’s 蜜桃恋人 editors.
My daughter in law planted a garden on my farm this year and was making heaped up rows to plant on. I鈥檝e gardened most of my life until the last several years because of disabilities and have never seen this method used! We live in western Oklahoma and her ancestors are in Texas and Kansas. Can you tell me why the mounded soil?
Your daughter-in-law may also be implementing hugelkultur (who-gul-cul-tour), by some definitions an Old World technique of making mounds of logs and sticks (that will eventually decay) and covering with organic matter, including compost, aged manure, and the like. Then, and for years, planting in it. Learn more here: www.almanac.com/news/gardening/gardening-advice/what-hugelkultur-ultimate-raised-bed
Thanks for your question! We’re guessing here. But it sounds like a form of raised bed gardens without the wood or stone sides. Elevated soil warms more quickly in the spring than the surrounding garden soil. This is a practice for cooler or wetter climates. In drier areas, hilling is not a great idea though, as much needed water can drain away. When you hill, you don’t just mound up dirt. You bury healthy amount of compost and well rotted manure underneath the mound first, and then some shovels of garden soil until each hill is 3 to 6 inches tall. It works well for snow peas and can provide an earlier start for beans and corn and also potatoes.
Also, we use the term 鈥渉illing鈥 for vining plants including squash, melons and cucumbers. However, the word 鈥渉ill鈥 is deceptive. It isn’t meant to be a raised mound as this would dry out quickly in many climates. It means that several seeds are grouped together in one spot and then thinned. Hills are used to space out the plants which vine and need room to spread.
Finally, there are some plants which require 鈥渉illing鈥 as they grow; with potatoes, gardeners gently mound soil around the growing plant.