Vegetable Gardening Help

my vegetable patchWhat are you planning for your vegetable patch in 2010? Have you decided, or do you need some help?

Help is Here

Here’s my raised bed vegetable patch in May of 2009. All that green you see is: onions, tomatoes, peppers, and spring greens (which are flowering yellow). Yum! My garden did really well last year.

I’ve already written about Best Spring Vegetables for Beginners, but maybe you’re not a beginner, or you’re planning a summer garden, or you know what you want to plant but you just don’t know where start. Or I’ve not yet written about the thing you need help with (if so please leave a comment or contact me).

For Help with…

1. Choosing tools – take a look at 5 Tools for Planting a Vegetable Garden.

2. Picking a book to teach yourself raised bed gardening – see Best Raised Bed Gardening Books.

3. Vegetable gardening in Kansas and the Heartland – see Growing Great Vegetables in the Heartland.

4. Selecting seeds – see 10 Lazy Tips to Choosing Seeds.

5. Companion Planting, or not.

6. Inspiration – start with Spring Greens Growing from my garden in February of 2009 then browse posts with titles of Garden Corner, or all posts tagged Kansas Garden.

Whatever you are planning for your vegetable patch, please share. I’d love to hear your dream.

Shop for Organic Seeds and Gardening Tools and Accessories – $20 Off $40 Or More at Gardens Alive! Find Vegetable Gardening books at Amazon.com.

Share and Enjoy:
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • email
  • Technorati
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Reddit

Related posts:

  1. When to Plant Vegetable Seeds
  2. Step by Step Gardening Club
  3. Lazy Gardening – choosing seeds

3 comments to Vegetable Gardening Help

  • [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Gardening Guru, Alison Kerr. Alison Kerr said: What's In YOUR Vegetable Patch | Loving Nature’s Garden | http://bit.ly/4GuHoM #playoutdoors #garden #green [...]

  • I’m not sure about everything, but there will definitely be several types tomatoes, various herbs, eggplant, green beans, and onions.

    Since my garden is not as big as I’d like it to be, some vegetables that I use frequently throughout the summer but are very reasonably priced at the farmers market, I let the farmers grow for me. Zucchini and green peppers are usually really inexpensive. That way, I grow my own and support the farmers.

  • Alison Kerr

    Great list Robin. And I agree, pick the things that work well for you to grow and shop locally for others, especially if they are inexpensive. I do that too. There’s a certain amount of trial and error involved in working out what works when you are new though; mistakes are OK.