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Q&A: Gardening in a Small Space
Answer: If you plan the garden out carefully on graph paper, you'll have your answer. Some of your crops can be grown in succession: for instance, since peas don't thrive in summer heat, you can follow them with a quick summer crop like cukes or squash, and grow them up the pea trellis. Growing vertically is a great way to expand your space, so put fence or trellis up on the north and west sides of your garden (a shorter one on the west side so it won't create too much afternoon shade). Dense plantings will compete more, so enrich the soil with compost between plantings, and make sure everything gets plenty of moisture.
Content provided by the National Gardening Association
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Posted Comments:
06-20-2009 07:30
chuck wrote:
Raised Bed
I have a 10x10 and tryed to plant cukes,beets,strawberries,and 8 tomatoes plants and now the only thing i can find is the strawberries cause the tomatoes growed so big they took over. u need a bigger raised garden .Good luck
06-17-2009 11:17
dorothy wrote:
gardening
I found that the book "Square Foot Gardening" was a big help for planting in small spaces. He basically works in 4x4 beds and fits more veggies in those spaces than I thought possible.
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