ducks4you
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I would look at a LOT of companion planting articles bc almost none of the ones I've read and saved have jived. There are a few givens, and here is what I've found works.
1) carrots do love tomatoes and you can succession plant, like I am doing this year.
2) onions grow great with lettuce and radishes. I have a salad garden every year with these.
3) two types of different root vegetables don't like the competition.
4) asparagus likes tomatoes, too.
5) most cabbages like to grow with kohlrabi and brussel sprouts, and broccoli and cauliflower.
6) turnips don't care WHO grows next to them, bc they are really edible weeds. There is a turnip variety that doesn't bulb and you eat the greens. I'm growing those this year for my chickens.
7) grow your herbs in your vegetable and flower beds. Oregano is great bc it spreads and smells great if you have to pull some out.
8) grow flowers in your vegetable beds. I have grown marigolds and geraniums in with my vegetables, as well as allysium.
When you are weeding, you don't have to pull the clover. It fixes nitrogen in the soil, so that helps. I often leave it, and then don't cry if I pull it out, just throw it down in the bed to decompose.
1) carrots do love tomatoes and you can succession plant, like I am doing this year.
2) onions grow great with lettuce and radishes. I have a salad garden every year with these.
3) two types of different root vegetables don't like the competition.
4) asparagus likes tomatoes, too.
5) most cabbages like to grow with kohlrabi and brussel sprouts, and broccoli and cauliflower.
6) turnips don't care WHO grows next to them, bc they are really edible weeds. There is a turnip variety that doesn't bulb and you eat the greens. I'm growing those this year for my chickens.
7) grow your herbs in your vegetable and flower beds. Oregano is great bc it spreads and smells great if you have to pull some out.
8) grow flowers in your vegetable beds. I have grown marigolds and geraniums in with my vegetables, as well as allysium.
When you are weeding, you don't have to pull the clover. It fixes nitrogen in the soil, so that helps. I often leave it, and then don't cry if I pull it out, just throw it down in the bed to decompose.