Square Foot Gardening
Save Money, Time, Water, and Effort
What is square foot gardening?
Mel Bartholomew
developed the square foot method as a solution to a whole host of gardening problems including overcoming poor soil and weed explosions. SFG is what I practice and what I want to share with you. The elements of SFG are: How To Get Started If you clicked on the links above, you know that building a raised bed is well worth the effort. The raised bed or beds should be no wider than you can reach across from any side. That means a maximum of 4 feet. Mel recommends a soil mix of 1/3 peat, 1/3 vermiculite, and 1/3 compost. I give other suggestions for
soil
mixes. The bottom line is that the soil should be nutrient rich, full of air, and highly water absorbent. Never walk on your garden soil. Walking on it creates compaction.
How to Figure Soil Volume
I have created a Square Foot Garden Genie to help you do all the calculations you will need to create a raised bed using the square foot garden method.The genie will walk you through: - figuring the dimensions for your raised bed
- calculating the volume of soil for the raised bed
- creating a soil mix recipe
- calculating the ingredient measurements for soil
- creating a garden layout plan
The genie is still in its beta version, but hop over and check it out. Let me know what I can do to make it work better for you.The user name and password are set. Just click submit.
Square Foot Garden Genie
Square Foot Garden Plans
Garden Layout Now you must lay a 1 foot grid on top of your raised bed. This can be accomplished with string or wire nailed in place. Or it can be made of wooden slats. Or you can wing it and just scratch lines onto the top of the soil. Place taller crops such as corn and trellised vines on the north end, so they don't shade other crops. Place shorter crops to the south. How many plants? Different plants need different space requirements. Squash and pumpkins - 3 squares per plant tomatoes, peppers - 1 per square Mel recommends that if the back of the seed packet says to thin to 12 inches, then plant 1 plant per square. If the seed pack says to thin to 6 inches, then plant 4 per square. If the pack says thin to 4 inches, then plant 9 per square. What's nice about square foot gardening is that you can really pack the plants in. Even if you overdo it a little, you'll get away with it, unless something small gets shaded out by something large. With that in mind, I think it's best to plant many, smaller raised beds instead of 1 large one. That way, the squash and other aggressive plants that might shade out smaller plants have their own bed to go wild in. And the lettuce have a nice "kiddie pool" all to themselves. Don't be afraid to experiment. That's how you will learn what works and what doesn't.
What about organic square foot gardening? Easy. Just make everything you do organic. Use organic
soil
,organic
fertilizers
, and organic methods of
pest control
.
Related topics:
The secret ingredient to great soil
container gardening
return from square foot gardening to home

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