How to Grow Vegetables - Part 2
>> Friday, March 13, 2009
Before you you start to plant your seeds  there is one futher consideration - the layout of your beds. The standard  practice has been to plant your crops in rows some eighteen inches apart or just  wide 
 enough to allow you room to walk between the  rows. 
This means that
every time you walk on the land your soil is being slightly compacted. The alternative is to create a raised or wide bed. In this method you divide your site into a number of beds about four feet wide with a narrow path in between. This allows you to reach the center of the bed from either side without treading on the soil.
 This means that
every time you walk on the land your soil is being slightly compacted. The alternative is to create a raised or wide bed. In this method you divide your site into a number of beds about four feet wide with a narrow path in between. This allows you to reach the center of the bed from either side without treading on the soil.
If you grow the same crop year after year in  the same bed, there is an increased risk of disease infecting your crops. To  minimise the risk you should avoid planting crops of the same family in the same  soil for three seasons. You can achieve this by having a four bed rotation and  moving the crops on to the next bed each year.
 When choosing seeds it makes sense to choose  disease resistant varieties where these are available. Saving your own seed is  not always a good idea for at least two reasons. Firstly because seed saved from  plants grown from hybrid seed will not come true, and secondly your home saved  seed may have become cross-pollinated from other crops grown on your  land.
 In the warmer parts of the United States most  seeds can be sown directly into the beds. You will have to cultivate the soil to  a fine tilth and then sow the seeds at the depth recommended on the packet. In  cooler areas, or where you want early crops, seeds will need to be sown in trays  or flats indoors. Overhead light, either natural or artificial using flourescent  tubes, and warmth is needed to ensure satisfactory germination and growth.  Before they can be planted out in the beds, the seedlings have to be hardened  off by placing them outside for longer periods each day so that they become  accustomed to the outdoor temperature. 
 Once your crops are all planted out in the  beds they will require regular watering, weeding and fertilizing. On average  your plants will need one inch of water a week. If this is not provided by  rainfall, you will have to make up the difference. It is better to give the  garden a good soaking once a week rather than applying small amounts of water  every other day. The best time to water is early in the morning. Hoe your beds  regularly to control the weeds and leave the soil in a loose, friable condition  to absorb later rainfall. Advice on fertilizing will be included with the  information on individual crops.
  
 
 
 
 
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