Garden Planning: A Quick Gardener’s Guide to Trusting Your Inner Wisdom

Seating in a garden to do your garden planning.

🌿 Are you ready to transform your garden into an organic paradise but feeling a bit lost on your next steps?

Tap into your senses!

Garden Planning

Seeing Beyond the Surface: 🌺

Imagine an organic garden that mirrors your aspirations—a sanctuary teeming with life, thriving with organic abundance. The secret lies in truly **seeing** your property. It’s not just about the soil and the plants; it’s about grasping the unique nuances, the energy, and the potential that your space holds.

Trust Your Instincts: 🌟

You possess an innate wisdom that can guide your gardening decisions. Embrace it! 🌻 Trusting yourself means recognizing your instincts and letting them lead you to the right choices for planning your organic garden.

Don’t underestimate the power of your intuition in nurturing your plants and making the right organic choices.

Dispelling Gardening Fears: 🍃

Apprehensions and doubts can hold you back from realizing your garden’s true potential. But fear not! 🌿 By learning to observe your property and prioritizing your dreams for your garden, you can dispel these worries. Take the first step in confronting your fears—acknowledge them and watch as they dissolve.

Trusting Yourself: A Quick Gardener’s Guide 📝

Observe Intently: 🧐

Take time to study your garden, noticing its quirks and unique characteristics. Go beyond the use of your eyes to see what is happening, with the light, the water, the critters. See with your heart as well.

These observations will allow you to better plan your garden and what you want to see where, and maybe see things you never noticed before.

Listen to Nature: 👂🏼

Nature communicates in its way. Tune in and understand what your garden is telling you. Sit quietly and hear the trees and plants. Hear the bird song, simply listen without expectation or judgment.

Experiment with Wonder: 💫

Don’t be afraid to try new methods or plants. Embrace the learning process. Enjoy the wonder of your organic garden’s transformation and your illuminated wisdom in the process.

Seek Support:😃

If you have garden planning questions, doubts or concerns, ask me! As an organic gardening expert, I’m here to support your journey. 🌿 Trust in my experience and knowledge to guide you through this process.

Take the Free Quiz and receive your Free Gardener Insight Packet that matches your gardening style.

It’s time to let your inner gardener shine and create the garden of your dreams! 🌿✨

Unlocking Abundance: The Power of Yearly Garden Planning

Are you looking forward to your spring and summer garden, with it’s bounty of yummy edibles and joyous blooms?

Do you want to see your garden teeming with vibrancy, brimming with succulent produce, and blossoming with colors that enrich both your soul and your dinner plate.

This is the promise of meaningful yearly garden planning. It’s more than a mere boring task, it’s a strategic roadmap that propels your garden toward greatness like an orchestra in harmony with you as the conductor.

By embracing yearly garden planning, you harness the power of foresight. You lay the groundwork in advance, aligning the stars to create a harmonious ecosystem where plants thrive in synergy.

Say goodbye to the days of haphazard planting that yield – well- ???  If you welcome a structured approach that optimizes resources, space, and time – whether you consider yourself an “organizer” or “planner” or not, you manifest more from your garden.

I realize some of you are “not into planning”, so for you, I have created steps to simplify and shorten the process and make it fun and create.

For those who like to plan, embrace my system and manifest abundance in your garden.

Below are some yearly garden planning ideas, carefully lifted from my full planning process to get you started.

Yearly Garden Planning Tips

Maximized harvests: Plan out all four seasons at once. Things can change, but it gives me a plan for those days when I need a bit of clarity. Strategically time your plantings to ensure a continuous yield throughout the seasons.

Ecosystem balance: Encourage beneficial insects, and discourage pests, by planning your garden to be a self-sustaining thriving ecosystem. Diversity is the key here, have as many different types of veggies, fruit, flowers, and herbs, as you can fit into your garden spaces.

Conscious time management: By planning all four seasons in advance, you can look at your calendar, and consider what else is going on in your life to make strategic decisions about when to start seedlings, when to direct seed, and when to do any soil amending with mycorrhiza or when to do your biodynamic preparation sprays.

Again, here is that link to book a short free call so we can illuminate the next best step to your garden planning.

I look forward to hearing about your amazing garden ideas, Debby

Unveiling the Secrets of Revolutionary Garden Bed Design

Hello, fellow cultivators of nature’s bounty! 🌱

Lets uncover five top considerations that are at the heart of organic garden bed design.

As a long time gardener myself, I’ve uncovered the missing links that streamlines your efforts, elevating your green spaces into thriving havens of vitality and abundance.

Imagine a canvas where every stroke of your trowel brings forth a symphony of life, where simplicity intertwines with efficiency, giving birth to an ecosystem teeming with vibrant flora.

That’s the essence of my unique garden bed design system – a groundbreaking– pun intended 😂 approach that unravels the complexities of organic gardening, empowering you to cultivate with joy and ease.

Vegetable garden design with late spring cabbage and kale and summer planted flowers and herbs.

The brilliance lies in the intricate dance between plant species, soil, and creatures, where each one contributes its unique strengths to the collective vitality of the entire garden.

Through this system, we transcend conventional gardening wisdom, harnessing the natural tendencies of plants to coexist harmoniously and thrive together, all while enhancing soil health and reducing maintenance efforts.

Top Considerations for Vegetable Garden Bed Design

Here are my top considerations for garden bed design that go beyond ensuring you have the right amount of light for each variety:

Crop Rotation: Ensure your soil remains the healthy vibrant foundation to your garden. Rotate your crops not only from bed-to-bed, but also from season-to-season, year-to-year.

Companion planting: Plants helping plants means you work less!  Use this wonderful method to enhance plant growth and critter protection.

Seed saving: If you are a seed saver, planning your garden beds, including proper isolation distances and/or techniques will all to nurture the plants you want to save seed from.

Ease of access: Consider harvest time for each of your yummy veggies and beautiful flowers.

Beauty: Every garden becomes a sanctuary when all your beds are beautiful. When I design veggie beds, and assist others to design theirs, insuring the bed looks amazing brings joy because beauty is food too!🙂

Now, you might be wondering, how does this transform your gardening journey?

Well, it’s simple – it’s about efficacy, harmony, and yield. By incorporating this innovative approach to your garden bed design, you unlock the true potential of your green space, fostering a sanctuary where nature’s balance flourishes effortlessly.

Lets embark on this transformative journey together!

Book a 15-minute free discovery call today to discover your next best steps and unveil the secrets behind this clarifying garden bed layout system.

Let’s nurture a garden that not only sustains but inspires, fostering a vibrant ecosystem that echoes the beauty and harmony of nature itself. 🌿

Designing Your Spring Veggie Garden

Bak choi is a great spring crop
Bak Choi

A client of mine, Deanna loves spring greens yet was daunted by lack of success with her spring garden.  She realized she didn’t really know how much space different plants needed. She also wasn’t certain what spring plants grow well with each other.  She had grown Bak Choi successfully, but that was about all.  She wanted to add more greens and cool weather root crops like radishes, carrots, beets and turnips, yet she was not sure how to integrate them with the greens.

In previous years, the root crops ended up being small at best and the greens ended up rotting. She was tired of buying what she felt like was wasted seed.  She had tried a couple times and wasn’t happy with the outcome.  When she came to me, this was one of her major concerns to insure productivity in her garden. She was so happy when she learned that some simple adjustments could make a huge impact on her productivity.

Here are a few ways she improved her spring garden.

Plant Spacing

plant spacing for your spring garden
Lettuce sown too close together is overly crowded.

When you direct seed it is harder to get plant spacing right.  Many folks only direct seed because they do not have a setup to start seeds indoors.  This was Deanna’s situation. She was direct seeding all her crops.  Seeds are small and can be hard to handle, so folks at the seed companies tend to expect you to scatter all the seeds in a packet in a row and then “thin” them so they have room to grow.  This is one way to give your plants more space, but a wasteful one.

It is far better to seed with wider spacing.  My rule is to seed at about 1/3 the spacing listed on the seed packet as the final plant spacing distance. This allows you to harvest smaller root crops or greens as they begin to crowd and leave some to get larger. You also don’t waste seed this way and can have one seed packet often last for a couple of years. Very handy to keep costs down.

Avoid scattering seed close together and then leaving them that was as they get larger.  This is how Deanna had rotting plants.  Not only, were so close they could not get any air circulation and rotted, but they did not have the space to grow to full size and produce the yield you would want.

If you fingers struggle with small seeds consider these options:

Buttercrunch lettuce from Territorial Seed Company
Territorial Seed Co.

Buy pelleted lettuce and carrot seed which is much easier. Check Territorial Seed Company for a variety of pelleted lettuce seed.

You can also get an inexpensive hand seeder that will allow you to dispense smaller seeds a bit easier. These can be super simple up to more sophisticated. Territorial has a selection of these also. One advantage is they can be used for all kinds of seeds.

If you have the advantage of being able to start greens seedlings indoors, it is easier to give each plant the space it needs. I still tend to transplant a bit close together and harvest every other or third one as they begin to crowd each other.  This extends the harvest and allows the remaining plants to get larger for harvest later and fills in the space so you are not wasting space in your garden.

rows of well spaced letttuce insure a good harvest

Timing

Another key to spring garden success is timing. Granted this is trickier as the weather gets less predictable and computer models are unable to keep up with climatic changes, yet there are some tricks you can employ.

Succession plant every two weeks for extended harvest First is to succession plant.  This is where you plant a new batch of the same crop about every two weeks. This gives you a couple advantages and can be done with either indoor or outdoor seed starting.

Outdoors, if weather turns too warm/hot/wet/dry for a crop, you can try again. Additionally, and perhaps more importantly, it is another way to spread out your harvest. This means you don’t harvest at once.  This is especially useful for root crops where you are harvesting the entire plant.

start spring seedlings indoors in winter

Valmaine Lettuce is great in all seasons
Valmaine Romaine Lettuce

Indoors, succession plant your spring greens and then transition to following those on with summer greens.  Some lettuces will take much more heat than others. A couple of my warm weather favorites here are Valmaine and Jericho romaines.  These can follow-on after cooler loving lettuces such as most of the butterheads.

Lettuces, cabbage and chard are cool loving crops and you’ll get an earlier harvest if you can start these indoors while it is still too cold to start them outdoors.  After you harden them off, they can be transplanted into the ground for your first greens harvest.  Spinach though, doesn’t transplant well so start that one directly in your garden.

As always there is trial and error in your specific microclimate and this is another reason for not scattering all your seed at once.

Companion Planting  

Spinach and beets are great spring companion plants
Spinach and beets are great spring companion plants

Another way to increase the use of your spring garden space is to interplant root crops with leaf crops.  Gratefully this is pretty easy with cool weather crops because most greens and roots combine just fine.

Lettuces are happy with all the cool weather roots.  Spinach and chard go well as they are in the same plants family.  Same idea with kale, cabbage, kohlrabi, turnips, rutabagas and radishes, which are all in the brassica family.

peas can feed the kale so they make great companions
Peas and Kale

Don’t forget a star of your spring garden – peas!  Peas thrive in spring so plant some of your pleasure be it snow peas, snap peas or shelling peas.  We love shelling peas best, granted they hardly make it out of the garden as I tend to just pick and eat them, fresh, raw and oh so sweet!! My favorites are Green Arrow and Alderman/Telephone Pole. Check the vine height of pea varieties to be sure they match your pea fence.  If you don’t have a pea fence, get one what doesn’t need support like Sugar Ann snap pea.  There is a reason why you may have heard “peas and carrots” they go tougher in the garden. Plant your carrots in front of your pea fence.

Pulling this all together

May people have asked me about how to design a spring veggie garden, so lets pull some of these tips together.

Choose your varieties and see when they will mature, if they can take some heat and how big they will be full sized.

Next use the companion planting tips to choose which plants to put in which bed.

Then decide how long you want to harvest each type of plant to create a succession planting schedule.  This will tell you when to start your seeds, be it indoors or out.  Remember root crops are all direct seeded.

Finally, choose a block of your garden for each set of plants for example, one for brassicas, one for peas and carrots, once of lettuce and radishes, etc.  Split up each block by how many rounds of succession planting you want.  So if you want three rounds, split it up into three sections.  Plant the first section, two weeks later the second section and three weeks later, the third session. Tada! You’ve designed your spring garden.

Don’t want to design your garden yourself?  Manifest a beautifully designed garden with Debby’s Professional Custom Garden Designs. Get Yours!

Companion plant cabbage and broccoli with root crops like carrots, betts, turnips and radish
Spring Boundy of Companion Planted Cabbages, Carrots, Beets, Brocolli and more!