Ridgerunner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2009
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- Location
- Southeast Louisiana Zone 9A
Part of it depends on where you live (climate) and how much room you have. Without knowing where you are, I really can't give a lot of suggestions you should follow, especially if you are just now, in June, getting ready to order seeds. Gardening is so local.
For me, in my climate and with a pretty large garden, my spring crops, planted in March, are radishes, leaf letuce, spinach, beets, carrots, peas, potatoes, kale, chard, and onions. My warm weather crops, planted when all danger of frost is past and the ground is warm, are corn, tomatoes, pepper, eggplant, beans, sweet potatoes, squash (both summer and winter), and okra. I will plant New Zealand spinach early July to give me a greens crop later in the season. In the fall, I will plant garlic, leeks, chard, and kale, with the thought that these will overwinter. The garlic and leeks will mature in the spring and the chard and kale will give me some fall greens but, with mulch, they will overwinter and give me some very early greens. I also plant beets and carrots in late summer. The beets give me beet greens and maybe some fresh beets. The carrots, if you mulch them to keep them from freezing, can stay in the ground all winter, giving great sweet carrots all winter.
I agree that you should have an herb section, growing whatever you use. I have basil, dill, parsley, chives, oregano, thyme, sage, and tarragon.
I grow some stuff that is expensive, some that I think is so much better fresh than bought, some that I like but would never buy, and some that my wife wants me to grow but I'd personally rather not. We all have our reasons and many of them are different. If you are going to put the effort in, you should pick what you want to grow. Otherwise you will feel like you are wasting your time and give up.
For me, in my climate and with a pretty large garden, my spring crops, planted in March, are radishes, leaf letuce, spinach, beets, carrots, peas, potatoes, kale, chard, and onions. My warm weather crops, planted when all danger of frost is past and the ground is warm, are corn, tomatoes, pepper, eggplant, beans, sweet potatoes, squash (both summer and winter), and okra. I will plant New Zealand spinach early July to give me a greens crop later in the season. In the fall, I will plant garlic, leeks, chard, and kale, with the thought that these will overwinter. The garlic and leeks will mature in the spring and the chard and kale will give me some fall greens but, with mulch, they will overwinter and give me some very early greens. I also plant beets and carrots in late summer. The beets give me beet greens and maybe some fresh beets. The carrots, if you mulch them to keep them from freezing, can stay in the ground all winter, giving great sweet carrots all winter.
I agree that you should have an herb section, growing whatever you use. I have basil, dill, parsley, chives, oregano, thyme, sage, and tarragon.
I grow some stuff that is expensive, some that I think is so much better fresh than bought, some that I like but would never buy, and some that my wife wants me to grow but I'd personally rather not. We all have our reasons and many of them are different. If you are going to put the effort in, you should pick what you want to grow. Otherwise you will feel like you are wasting your time and give up.