Please note: This site's design is only visible in a graphical browser that supports Web standards, but its content is accessible to any browser or Internet device. To see this site as it was designed please upgrade to a Web standards compliant browser.

Skip navigation

How should I space my plants?

Garden Rows

Spacing seedlings (or seeds) uniformly, tailored to their full-grown shape and size, will provide adequate space and light for them to mature. Plenty of light is essential to produce high-yield crops.

Spacing between plants varies according to the type of plant. However, there are three basic patterns for arranging plants in soil-beds.

  • Double Rows are used for plants such as potatoes, corn, radishes, and leaf lettuce.
  • Double-Alternating Rows are used for plants such as head lettuce, cabbage, broccoli and similar-size crops.
  • Single Rows along one side of the soil-bed are used for tomatoes, melons and other crops.

Click on the Transplanting/Planting Guide to see a chart showing row arrangements and spacing requirements for many common crops.

Using a marker to mark your soil-beds before you plant is the best way to ensure uniform spacing. You will learn about making a marker in the next section.

Garden Genius

Click on Planting Guide and enter the spacing, row arrangement, and depth of planting seeds or seedlings for your crops. Or get The Garden Wizard to make it even easier.

Join the Affiliate Program

We invite you to join with us as an affiliate in selling the Food For Everyone Foundation’s Mittleider gardening digital products!

You can immediately be making 40% of each sale of these excellent vegetable gardening classics.

More Information

FREE GREENHOUSE PLANS!

Download free greenhouse plans to build your own inexpensive greenhouse!


Simply join the free Yahoo Groups MittleiderMethodGardening group and under comments say “send free greenhouse plans.”




-->


Free Sustainable Gardening Ezine

Sign-up to receive a free gardening Ezine. You will get helpful gardening tips and insights to help you face your toughest gardening challenges.

Sign-up Now!

Free Garden Journal

Here is a Free Garden Journal that you can use all year long in your garden. Download now! (PDF, 447 KB)

What's New

-
The Mittleider Library
->

Nine Complete Mittleider Gardening Books and 9 Manuals now available on one cd-rom. Read more.

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!

Enjoy our site and please visit other friendly sites -

We have carefully selected the following sites in home and garden, environmental and alternative energy, landscaping, horticulture, and gardening educational Sites.