Garden Planning Worksheet

Don’t worry if you start out small because being able to stay on top of a small garden will have you eager to plant more next year.

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by Adobestock/yanadjan

These tried-and-tested garden planning worksheets will help you conquer the complexities of food self-sufficiency to reduce your grocery budget and provide wholesome food.

The best gardening advice I can offer is to start out simple. Most of us would love to cut back on our grocery bill, and growing our own food certainly helps. When we’re plunking seedlings or seeds into our garden soil, it doesn’t look like all that much work. But when all those plants start to grow and require care, a beginning gardener can wonder what on earth they were thinking.

That’s why I recommend starting out by planting foods you and your family eat a lot and that will grow well in your region. Here in the Pacific Northwest, I can’t successfully grow okra, sweet potatoes, or peanuts, because the weather simply isn’t hot enough. Peppers and tomatoes don’t do well here except in a greenhouse, but they may thrive where you garden.

Most seed catalogs and seed packets specify an ideal region or growing Zone. Also, you can seek advice from neighbors who’ve gardened successfully. Many independent local nurseries will offer seedlings of vegetables known to do well in your specific Zone and region.

Another way to select what to plant in your plot is to consider how well the item can be preserved. While cucumbers are most people’s go-to for pickling, my husband really doesn’t care for cucumber pickles. But we’ve been known to eat an entire quart of pickled asparagus at one meal. My daughter has grown to love fermented garlic dill pickles, so we grow the ‘Chicago Pickling’ cucumber. It’s a prolific producer that’s enjoyable fresh on salads, and it makes great pickles.

  • Updated on Jan 10, 2024
  • Originally Published on Dec 18, 2023
Tagged with: garden planning, vegetable garden planning
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