Posts Tagged ‘Salad Garden’

Vegetable Seeds for a Small Garden

What kind of vegetable seeds should you plant for a small garden?  If you’re tight on space, you’ll want to carefully consider what seeds you plant.  Some vegetables grow into large plants that can take over a small space!

Vegetable Seeds and Variety

This topic actually has a double meaning.  Most people want a bit of variety to the vegetables they grow.  And it also refers to the variety of a particular vegetable.  For example, some tomato plants can go wild and grow 6 or more feet tall.  Other varieties are shorter and more compact (thus conserving growing space).  There are quite a few vegetable varieties that can be used successfully in a small space vegetable garden.

Here are some ideas that I have used for a small vegetable garden, in two sizes — 4′ x 4′ and 4′ x 6′.  Naturally, you won’t be able to grow a ton of different vegetables in these small space vegetable gardens, but you can certainly grow plenty.  You just need to know the varieties of vegetables that will work well for you.

If you indeed can only use a 4′ x 4′ space, please consider a raised bed vegetable garden.  Your veggies will grow better because of the deeper loamy soil.  Better growing translates to a larger harvest.

Vegetable Seeds for a 4′ x 4′ Garden

If you have just a 4′ x 4′ space, you won’t have a lot of room to spare.  One small garden type I recommend is a salad garden, which is wonderful for those hot Summer nights.

My favorite salad garden consists of the following:

  • Tomatoes
  • Lettuce and/or spinach
  • Radishes

Where you need to be careful is with the varieties of tomatoes and cucumbers you grow; they are the two plants that grow largest.  That being said, here are the varieties of vegetable seeds I recommend for a 4′ x 4′ raised bed garden.

Tomatoes: Celebrityicon, Sweet Baby Girlicon, Better Bush Improved Hybrid.icon  All three are great choices, but my top pick of these three is Celebrity.  Since you can grow 2 tomato plants in a 4′ x4′ garden, why not add a second variety for, well, variety!

Lettuce: I recommend leaf lettuces over head lettuces, because you can pluck leaves as needed instead of waiting for a whole plant to get big enough. As long as you don’t pluck too many leaves at one time from a given plant, it will just grow more leaves to use later. Some of the lettuces I like are Red Sailsicon, Simpson Eliteicon. If you’re feeling adventurous, try Salad Bowl Mixicon.

Spinach: I love baby spinach leaves for a salad, and they are quite nutritous. Pick what you need from several plants, then let them keep developing new leaves for you! My favorite small-space spinach is Renegadeicon.

Radishes: It’s so very amazing how fast these vegetables can grow! Plant them a week or two after the lettuce and/or spinach. As you harvest them, you can plant more seeds, for a continuing harvest. I love color in my salads, so my choice is Easter Egg Blend IIicon.

In general, plant 2 tomatoes (diagonally from each other) and keep other plants 18″ away from them.  The fill in with radishes, lettuce and/or spinach, planted just a smidgen closer than specified on the seed pack.  After all, in a raised bed garden, you have the wonderful soil that enables you to place the vegetables a little closer than normal.

Vegetable Seeds for a 4′ x 6” Garden

In addition to the veggies specified above, I like to add cucumbers or summer squash to a 4′ x 6′ raised bed small space vegetable garden.  Pick only one of the two, because you want at least 2 plants so that you have enough flowers for the veggies to produce well.

You can choose to grow your cucumbers or squash sprawling or up a cage.  There are different kinds of each.

Cucumbers: For sprawling over the side, I like Salad Bush Hybridicon. (You can also train this up a cage if you like). But if I am going the cage route, I prefer Sweet Successicon.

Summer Squash: These I just grow up a cage! My top picks are Park’s Straightneckicon for yellow squash and Spineless Beauty icon for zucchini.

Note: You can let any of these sprawl if you like; make a hill on one of the 4′ ends of the raised bed and you can have three plants, spilling over the sides.

Final Notes on Vegetable Seeds

If you don’t like something on these lists, you can choose other veggies.  In particular, pole beansicon make great additions to your small space garden because you can train them up a trellis or tower!

If you’re longing for some sweet peppers instead, try the sweet pepper Carmenicon. Not a bell, but it’s space saving and delicious served all kinds of ways.

Vegetable seeds for small gardens aren’t hard to grow, but the smaller your garden, the more carefully you need to choose your varieties.

Enjoy your harvest!