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Sample Garden Plan

Dr. Mittleider's suggested garden for a family of four to live on.

What to Plant How Many Plants Yield
1 bed potatoes 92 plants 145 pounds
1 bed beans (bush) 180 plants 68 pounds
1 bed peas (bush) 362 plants 90 pounds
1/2 bed broccoli 26 plants 14 pounds
1/2 bed cauliflower 26 plants 75 pounds
1/2 bed lettuce (head) 26 plants 56 pounds
1/2 bed cabbage 26 plants 70 pounds
1 bed sweet corn 92 plants 92 ears
1 bed zucchini 20 plants 120 pounds
1 bed banana squash 20 plants 120 pounds
1 bed cantaloupes 26 plants 182 pounds
1 bed watermelons 20 plants 182 pounds
1 bed tomatoes 26 plants 156 pounds

Here's what can be planted later in the fall for a second harvest.

What to Plant How Many Plants Yield
1 bed potatoes 92 plants 145 pounds
1 bed beans (bush) 180 plants 68 pounds
1 bed peas (bush) 362 plants 90 pounds
1/2 bed broccoli 26 plants 14 pounds
1/2 bed cauliflower 26 plants 75 pounds
1/2 bed lettuce (head) 26 plants 56 pounds
1/2 bed cabbage 26 plants 70 pounds
1 bed sweet corn 92 plants 92 ears

To harvest two crops with the assortment of foods listed above in one season, it is important to transplant well-grown potted plants in the beds.

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FREE GREENHOUSE PLANS!

Download free greenhouse plans to build your own inexpensive greenhouse!


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What's New

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Tip of the Day

It's Fall and time to prepare your soil for winter! For those of you in the Northern hemisphere who have winters, October, November, and and early December are the time you need to be cleaning up your garden and preparing it for next spring's planting. You can even plant hardy garlic, which will overvegetable crops such as radishes, peas, cabbage and broccoli.

The freeze/tha-winter and get an early spring start. Before snow covers your garden mae sure all old materials are either removed from the garden, or if they are clean of weed seeds and disease, till them into your soil-beds. Also, when it's not too muddy, go in and give everything a good weeding with the 2-way hoe (see Tools). Weeding thoroughly in the Fall helps keep the weeds from getting a big head start on you before you can get into the garden in the spring, and is very important.

If you grew a Mittleider garden this year, your beds will benefit from tilling or digging. You can apply Pre-Plant and Weekly Feed to the bed area now, then till them in, or wait until early spring. Either way after tilling place strings on your stakes, and re-make the beds.

Be sure to re-check the level of each bed accurately, since they may have changed a little. Do not be satisfied with anything more than 1" fall in a 30'-long soil-bed. Good Gardening!

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