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The Completed Garden Plan For 2014 – Gearing Up For Vegetable Season!

The 2014 Garden Plan - You can click on the picture to see full size

The 2014 Garden Plan – You can click on the picture to see the full size plan in detail.

As much as we love the holiday season – at the stroke of midnight on December 31st we happily turn our thoughts to the coming growing season at the farm!  It’s important to have our garden plan completed in order to have seeds and plants ready to start indoors in the coming months. (see: Starting Seeds Indoors).

Grow What You Love To Eat:

We create the plan first and foremost based on what our family likes best to eat – and for what we will need to store, can and preserve for the year. It sounds so basic – but it’s so important when planning to grow what you like – making your garden and the time you spend tending it as useful as possible.

Canned Salsa is a staple in our house - so our plan includes a lot of tomatoes, peppers and onions!

Canned Salsa is a staple in our house – so our plan includes a lot of tomatoes, peppers and onions!

It’s somewhat comical, but whenever we publish ours – it’s not long before someone asks why it doesn’t include beets,  lima beans or brussel sprouts. Well – quite honestly –  in our family, nobody will eat them! We stick to growing what we love.  Our plan is always full of a large quantity of tomatoes and peppers – because all of us (and an ever-growing portion of our extended family) love the salsa, ketchup, pizza sauce, pasta sauce, tomato juice and more we create from them. (see: Growing A Garden For Canning)

The 2014 Garden Plan

We added the Cherokee Heirloom Tomato to the garden plan this year.  It has a beautiful color along with it's great taste.

We added the Cherokee Heirloom Tomato to the garden plan this year. It has a beautiful color along with great taste.

For this year’s plan – we continued to use more heirloom varieties, adding Brandywine (all purpose and great taste), Cherokee Purple (dark purple meaty interior) , Taxi (yellow) and Moskvich (early slicing and juicing tomat0) to the mix.  For the peppers, we added a sweet lunchbox variety to the plan – and kept in the hot Chinese Lantern peppers (great for drying into powder or fresh) that performed so well last year. In addition to the endless variety and amazing taste of heirlooms – the real beauty is that the seeds can be saved and re-used each year – an important part of becoming more sustainable and less reliable on having to purchase our seeds every year.

This year – in anticipation of having the new root and wine cellar completed by fall – we added two long raised rows of potatoes and onions outside of the main garden. Onions and potatoes do well together – and we are hoping the two 50′ rows will provide enough extra to store for use all through the winter.

The Importance Of Companion Planting and Crop Rotation.

Although not perfect – we try hard to employ two very important practices to our garden plan – companion planting and crop rotation.

Using crop rotation and companion planting can lead to more productive harvests

Using crop rotation and companion planting can lead to more productive harvests

Companion planting takes advantages of the positive relationship between plants to help with everything from growth rate, pest resistance and soil fertility.  In basic terms – some plants – such as corn, peas, beans and potatoes perform better when planted close to each other.  On the other hand, cabbage can have issues when planted around tomatoes – so we try to keep as much separation as we can between them.  For example – this year we are growing our cucumbers in the same rows as our popcorn.  They perform well together, and the cucumber vines can grow up and around the stocks for support. It’s not an exact science – but every little bit helps!

We rotate our plants each  year to help keep our plants growing strong

We rotate our plants each year to help keep our plants growing strong

We also rotate our crops around in the raised rows each year to avoid planting the same crops in the same space. Tomatoes and peppers (related in the nightshade family), go from the top of the beds to the bottom, and then back up for year three. We also rotate the rows – so a specific plant (i.e. tomato) won’t be planted in the same soil for four years.  It really helps keep pests and soil borne diseases at bay, and lets the soil recover from the specific nutrients that each plant takes from it.

So there you have it – our 2014 plan!

Happy Gardening! Jim and Mary

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