I either mulch my garden beds or plant them to cover crops in the late fall before winter comes. Mulched beds are by far the easiest to prep. All I have to do is rake the straw mulch aside and the soil is usually weed-free and ready to go. Sometimes I have to do some shallow cultivation to take care of spring weed seedlings.
Taking care of cover crops in the garden is a little more complicated. Recently I’ve been using our hand sickle to cut the cover crops as close to the ground as I can, raking the cut tops aside, then using a stirrup hoe to turn up the roots. I’ll usually let the soil rest a few days before using a rake to remove large root debris before planting. Cover crops can also be tilled in, but you have to wait a good three weeks before planting to allow the cover crop residue to break down in the soil.
Spring crops that can be directly sown include peas, lettuce, greens, kale, Swiss chard, beets, turnips, radishes, and carrots. Some of these crops I choose to grow out in the greenhouse first to give myself a head start. When it comes to planting seeds in the garden I am all about efficiency. I use a garden trowel to make a shallow furrow to drop seeds in, taking note of the proper depth for the seed I am planting. Once the furrow is made, I just drop the seeds in at the proper spacing then drag the trowel back over the furrow to bury the seed. This really speeds up the process.
Some seed should be banded or broadcast instead of being sown in a straight row, including crops like salad mixes and arugula. In this case I have found the spring tine cultivator to be a great tool to shallowly scratch in the seed and barely bury them with soil. The trick with broadcasting seed is to make sure too much seed doesn’t come out at once and end up in clumps when the crop comes up. You can see I didn’t do a perfect job with the arugula below!
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Ana | 31st Mar 16
Those transplants look so good! We're just starting ours indoors right now, since for us here in Canada it's not yet planting time outside. This is the first year we're doing a spring (and hopefully, fall) garden in addition to our season-long one, which takes quite a bit of planning for the limited space we have in our containers, but it's so rewarding to eat veggies that we've grown ourselves.
Looking forward to more updates from your garden throughout the year, I'm always in awe when I see the pictures you guys post on Instagram.
Hope you're having a great week so far!
Anonymous | 31st Mar 16
Thanks for taking the time to write and explain this process, Luke. I admire the amount of planning and patience that is required for gardening. Best of luck this season. -Ali
debbie h. | 1st Apr 16
Hey Luke, I LOVE that you are doing these posts and showing the photos of your planting. Could you possibly go into more detail about the broadcast planting of the arugula and salad mix? I always grow both but did not know you should not grow them in rows, ooops. The few times I have tried to broadcast seed, I end up with huge clumps of plants and empty spots. I would love to know your technique to help keep this from happening 🙂 Thanks so much and happy gardening!!!!
Debbie in Virginia
debbie h. | 1st Apr 16
Me again. So I went back and read the gardening posts for 2015. And it brought up all kinds of questions that I am hoping you both can answer for me. Are you planting enough veggies for the two of you to eat or do you also sell at a Farmer's Market? If it is just enough for the two of you plus enough to put some up for the Winter, roughly how many of each type of vegetable plants do you plant? Also your flower beds in your veggie garden are beautiful. Do you plant from seed or do you buy annuals and plant them? I am sure I will come up with more questions soon. Your gardening plot looks to be about the same size as my ours and I am trying to make the absolute best use out of the space. I am home full time now and have the time to really, really focus on the garden, canning and preserving, etc. Thanks again for all and any help you can give.
Have a great day.
Debbie
Unknown | 22nd Apr 16
Thank you for the helpful hints!!
Natalie Freeman | 26th Apr 16
Hi Debbie. Sorry to have not responded sooner – I just now went back to read comments. Not used to doing that!
But to answer your questions: Rows are fine for arugula and lettuce mixes if you have a hard time broadcasting the seed evenly. Some people even mix seed with sand so that they can evenly broadcast it without clumps. We grow way more than we can eat ourselves. We sell extra veggies to our egg customers and give away a lot to friends. We're not quite large enough for a farmers market, but still big enough to have a lot of extra! And I'm about to write a blog post about how we grow flowers, so that should answer your questions on our flower beds. We grow all of our flowers from seed, either transplanted or directly sown.