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Vegetable garden plan layout for raised beds
Vegetable garden plan layout for raised beds













vegetable garden plan layout for raised beds

I always seem to end up with more seedlings and seeds than I have space for. While it’s easy to get carried away and want to grow all the things, you only have room for so much. It’s fun to watch it grow and then give it a taste test at the end of the season. I also recommend planting at least one new-to-you veggie. And I often grow way more than I need-any extras get frozen for winter meals. So tomatoes are always on my list to plant. They just can’t compare to the ones you grow yourself (or get at the farmers’ market in the summer). But that’s not because I don’t like them. One thing that doesn’t show up often on my grocery list are tomatoes.

vegetable garden plan layout for raised beds

What items show up week after week? For me, that means lettuce and other greens, like spinach, Swiss chard, kale, and baby bok choy, cucumbers, onions, a variety of herbs, peppers (I usually plant at least one hot pepper to make habanero jelly, and a variety of other sweet peppers), the odd root veggie, like beets and carrots. I like to recommend starting with your grocery list. I ended up creating a couple because I had fun planting all those virtual veggies!ĭeciding what to plant in a small vegetable garden layout How do you figure out how much to grow? I thought I would put together a 4×8 raised bed vegetable garden layout to show how much can be planted in a raised bed.

vegetable garden plan layout for raised beds

You’ve built your raised bed in a space that gets at least six to eight hours of sunlight a day, and filled it with soil. You’re excited to grow a vegetable garden.















Vegetable garden plan layout for raised beds