Growing Vegetables in a Small Space - 6 Tips You Can Use Today (2024)

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by Linda Carloni

Small spaces are bigger than you think. A small plot or containers on a deck or balcony can grow a remarkable amount of food. Just like bigger plots, small spaces need to provide fertile soil, good sun, and appropriate watering.

Growing Vegetables in a Small Space - 6 Tips You Can Use Today (2)

Lovely small garden space - photo credit Jim Farr

  1. The variety of a vegetable is important. Tomatoes and squash can grow on huge plants, but there are also varieties of smaller size. Consider varieties labeled “patio” or stated to be good for containers. Stay away from varieties labeled “giant”, “whopper” or the like. Make sure the vegetable you want to plant is suitable to plant at the time you want to plant it.
  2. Go up! Pole beans, cucumbers and snap and snow peas can produce a lot in a little horizontal space if trellised. Pole beans and peas grow well up twine secured 6 to 8 feet higher than the earth where they are planted. You may need to nudge them towards and up the twine at first, but they will catch on. Cucumbers are good on a sloped trellis – it keeps the fruit off the dirt and makes them straighter and easier to find. Place the trellis or twine for climbing at the time you plant, to avoid the possibility of damaging the plant while placing it at a later time.
  3. Growing Vegetables in a Small Space - 6 Tips You Can Use Today (3)

    Rooftop garden - photo credit Erin Wright

    Don’t waste the space!
    You can grow two or more vegetables in one area by planting slower-maturing and faster-maturing crops together. The quick-to-mature vegetables will be ready for harvest before the two crops begin to crowd each other. Once the fast crop is picked, the slower crop will have more room to grow to maturity. Examples include planting the seeds of radishes (fast) and carrots (slow) in the same area, or alternating rows of leaf lettuce (fast) and tomatoes (slow). You can also grow leafy vegetables in a wide row (8 to 12 inches wide) instead of a row of single plants. When the plants grow, they can provide a leaf canopy that suppresses weed growth and conserves water. When you’ve planted a vertical crop, once the crop is growing well up its support, put some smaller plants like lettuce in the room around the base. Make sure you’re providing enough water for all the plants using the space.
  4. Succession planting. As soon as one crop is done, plant another appropriate to the coming season. It’s frequently possible to get two crops of bush beans in during our long summer season, for example. Or as you cut down the determinate tomatoes that have finished producing, plant some potatoes or carrots for the fall.

    Growing Vegetables in a Small Space - 6 Tips You Can Use Today (4)

    Patio tomatoes in trough - photo credit Erin Wright

  5. Grow over multiple seasons. In the San Francisco Bay Area, we can grow in the spring, summer, and fall, and some gardeners even extend their food growing into the winter. Many of our leafy greens – lettuce, spinach, and kale for example – grow better in somewhat cooler weather than our hot dry summers. Crops like broccoli, bok choy, and cabbage have fewer pest problems in cooler weather as well.
  6. Feed your soil.
  • Most vegetables, particularly melons, squashes, corn, and cole crops such as cauliflower and cabbage, are “heavy feeders”, using a lot of nutrition from the soil.
  • Growing vegetables over multiple seasons and keeping the soil continuously in use requires soil amendment and fertilizer, and more than is needed for single-season gardening. Before you start each new plant, add compost and/or another source of nitrogen. Compost will provide not just nitrogen but also valuable organic matter to improve the texture of your soil. You can even make your own!
  • Other good sources of nitrogen are fish emulsion, blood meal, or a dry fertilizer with a high “N” number. If you use a dry, concentrated fertilizer, be careful to follow the package directions, as too much can cause runoff that’s bad for our streams and the Bay.
  • Many crops also benefit from some complete fertilizer containing phosphorus and potassium. If you are planting in sandy soil or a container, plant nutrition is likely needed more often than if you are planting in clay soil.
  • Consider occasionally giving an area a rest and planting a cover crop to restore it.

Then relax and enjoy the vegetable bounty your small space has provided!

Resources:

Your Garden Month-by-Month Guide

http://acmg.ucanr.edu/Your_Garden_Month-by-Month/

Grow Your Own Food

Collection of articles - http://acmg.ucanr.edu/Growing_Your_Own_Food/Growing_Vegetables/

Making compost: http://acmg.ucanr.edu/Growing_Your_Own_Food/Improve_Your_Soil_With_Compost/

Two good resources with much more detail on amending and fertilizing soil: https://ucanr.edu/blogs/dirt/?mobileview=normal and .


This Iowa State University Extension article has more detail on many of these space-saving techniques for vegetable gardening:
https://store.extension.iastate.edu/product/Small-Plot-Vegetable-Gardening

Still need help?

Want additional help? Confused? Email us at acmg@ucanr.edu. Or contact us through our website http://acmg.ucanr.edu/Contact_Us/ .

Growing Vegetables in a Small Space - 6 Tips You Can Use Today (2024)

FAQs

Growing Vegetables in a Small Space - 6 Tips You Can Use Today? ›

Stick to smaller plants to grow a wider variety of things. For small containers like window boxes, herbs, annual flowers and leaf lettuce are great choices. These plants grow quickly, and you can usually get many harvests throughout the summer.

What vegetables are good for small spaces? ›

Space Saving Vegetables For Small Gardens
  • Leeks.
  • Lettuce.
  • Chillies.
  • Round Radish.
  • Kale.
  • Beans.
  • Brinjal.
  • Capsicum.
May 13, 2024

How to start gardening in a small area? ›

Stick to smaller plants to grow a wider variety of things. For small containers like window boxes, herbs, annual flowers and leaf lettuce are great choices. These plants grow quickly, and you can usually get many harvests throughout the summer.

What steps are needed to successfully grow vegetables? ›

6 Essential Steps for a Successful Vegetable Garden
  1. Step 1: Choose your site wisely. ...
  2. Step 2: Prep your soil. ...
  3. Step 3: Decide what to plant. ...
  4. Step 4: Plant at the right time. ...
  5. Step 5: Watering and Mulch. ...
  6. Step 6: Organic pest and disease control.
Apr 17, 2014

What is one strategy for getting more produce out of a small garden? ›

Another way to support higher yields in small garden spaces is to avoid planting the same family of vegetables in the same spot every year. Research shows that rotating crops so that one plant family occupies a given location only every three or four years has positive effects on yields.

How to make a vegetable garden in small spaces? ›

Grow vegetables vertically to save space in your garden beds. If you opt to grow a variety of vegetables, look for compact varieties and vining crops that can be trained to grow vertically on support structures. For example, pole beans take up less space than bush beans.

How can I start my garden for cheap? ›

How to Garden on a Budget
  1. Sow Seeds vs Seedlings. ...
  2. Learn to Propagate. ...
  3. Save Seeds from Plants in your Garden and Kitchen. ...
  4. Visit Plant and Seed Swaps. ...
  5. Grow Food from Leftovers and Scraps. ...
  6. Use Compost to Feed your Soil for Free. ...
  7. Collaborate with your Neighbours. ...
  8. Grow Living Mulch Plants.
Jun 23, 2022

How to make a vegetable garden in the backyard? ›

10 Steps to Starting a Vegetable Garden
  1. Choose the right location. Choose a location for the garden that has plenty of sun, ample space and close proximity to your hose or water source. ...
  2. Select your veggies. ...
  3. Prepare the soil. ...
  4. Check planting dates. ...
  5. Plant the seeds. ...
  6. Add water. ...
  7. Keep the weeds out. ...
  8. Give your plants room to grow.
Aug 9, 2020

What vegetables grow best together? ›

Which Vegetables Grow Well Together?
VegetableCompanion PlantDon't Plant Together
OnionsBeets, carrots, Swiss chard, lettuce, peppersAll beans and peas
PeasBeans, carrots, corn, cucumbers, radish, turnipGarlic, onions
PotatoesBeans, corn, peasTomatoes
SquashCorn, melons, pumpkinsNone
11 more rows
Jun 26, 2021

What makes vegetables grow faster? ›

Provide your vegetables with plenty of everything. This means, full sun, plenty of water, well-draining and organic matter-rich soil, and lots of food.

How to farm in a small space? ›

Traditionally, people plant horizontally on a vast expanse of land. But, when the space is limited and there is a need to pack an abundance of crops into a small space, the most logical way is to go vertical. Going vertical means putting plants in specific containers and stacking them up in a wall-like space.

How can we grow in small ways? ›

9 tips to grow as a person
  1. Identify your personal values. Consider exploring what matters to you — what gives you meaning and purpose. ...
  2. Practice daily gratitude. ...
  3. Adopt a healthier lifestyle. ...
  4. Meditate. ...
  5. Get quality rest. ...
  6. Set short- and long-term goals. ...
  7. Be kind to yourself. ...
  8. Embrace setbacks.

What leafy vegetable needs only a small space to grow? ›

Lettuce. Lettuce is the most practical container plant. They don't need a lot of root space so a 6- to 8-inch deep pot works great or plant them around the edge of a larger container, leaving room in the middle for a pepper or tomato.

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