Best and Worst Companion Plants for Okra (2024)

Gardening

Vegetables

By

Peg Aloi

Best and Worst Companion Plants for Okra (1)

Peg Aloi

Peg Aloi is a gardening expert and former garden designer with 13 years experience working as a professional gardener in the Boston and upstate New York areas. She received her certificate in horticulture from the Berkshire Botanical Garden in 2018.

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Updated on 10/08/21

Reviewed by

Mary Marlowe Leverette

Best and Worst Companion Plants for Okra (2)

Reviewed byMary Marlowe Leverette

Mary Marlowe Leverette is one of the industry's most highly-regarded housekeeping and fabric care experts, sharing her knowledge on efficient housekeeping, laundry, and textile conservation. She is also a Master Gardener with over 40+ years of experience and 20+ years of writing experience. Mary is also a member of The Spruce Gardening and Plant Care Review Board.

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Best and Worst Companion Plants for Okra (3)

Companion planting is an organic method for controlling pests and diseases in your vegetable garden. This method can help your plants stay healthier and increase your harvest yield. It can also help prevent blight and other problems that can affect garden soil. While there is scientific data to confirm the benefits of companion planting, it's reassuring to know that much of this advice comes from long-time gardeners who have seen the effectiveness of this method.

Companion planting is central to the folklore and oral tradition of gardening. Many gardeners can recall childhood stories from a parent or other relative who was also a gardener who insisted on planting certain plants next to other plants for all kinds of reasons.

Good Companion Plants for Okra

Okra (Abelmoschus esculentus) is a vegetable that seems to inspire either love or hate, but never indifference. It has a texture that can be somewhat slimy when cooked, but this can be overcome by roasting or other methods. It's a crucial ingredient in gumbo and its rich juice is used to thicken sauces, so for those reasons alone it has star power. A member of the mallow family, its flowers are quite showy.

Okra will tolerate some drought conditions, but in hot weather, make sure it gets at least an inch of water per week. Well-drained soil is also crucial for okra. Some of okra's best garden companions are plants that, like okra, need plenty of water. This includes cucumbers, melons, eggplant, and sweet or hot peppers.

  • Cucumbers love water and rich soil, as does okra, so these will do well side by side. Don't plant them too close, as cucumbers vines spread and also need a large amount of sun to ripen.
  • Pepper plants will repel cabbage worms, which can be a destructive nuisance to okra plants.
  • Melons can be a good okra companion because, like cucumbers, they need ample sun and water. Plant on the east side of the okra so the melons benefit from the morning sun, or on the west side for afternoon sun leaving plenty of room for the vines to run.
  • Planting basil near your okra is also beneficial. The strong fragrance of basil repels a number of pests that like okra, including flea beetles, stinkbugs, spider mites, aphids, and whiteflies. Okra's tall plants, which can grow up to six feet, can also provide some shade for this somewhat tender herb if summer days get hot.
  • Flowering annuals are good okra companions to help attract pollinators that will visit the okra flowers. Late summer bloomers like cosmos, zinnias, and calendula are good choices.

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Bad Companions for Okra

Most gardeners think of nematodes as beneficial for the garden. But they're detrimental to okra because these tiny creatures like to feed on the young roots of okra plants. Nematode presence can be increased in soil used to grow certain vine crops, like sweet potatoes or squash. Skip at least a year before planting okra in soil where vine crops (except for cucumbers or melons, which do well alongside okra) have been grown. Other than this consideration, okra doesn't really have any "bad companions."

Okra Makes a Good Companion

Okra's sturdy stems allow it to be a sort of windbreaker to more tender plants, such as peppers. It makes a good companion for lettuces because their shallow roots won't compete for nutrients needed by okra, and the okra plants help protect tender lettuces from the hot sun by providing some shade. Okra thrives in hot weather, so you may grow it as a shade plant for greens that do well in partial sun (like kale and herbs including parsley, tarragon, chives, and cilantro).

It's also a good idea to plant some early cool weather crops alongside okra, like peas. Your peas will be ready for harvest before the okra plants get really big, so there's no danger of the bigger okra plants crowding the peas. Just remove the pea plants after the last harvest to free up space for the okra to get bigger as the weather gets warmer.

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  1. Companion Planting Improves Gardens.Msstate.edu. N.p., n.d. Web.

  2. Companion Planting in the Vegetable Garden. University of Massachusetts Amherst.

  3. Home Garden Okra. University of Georgia Extension

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