Showing posts with label crop rotation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crop rotation. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Crop Rotation and the Circular Garden



I have little or no artistic sense whatsoever, especially in the garden. I tend to plant in rows, in rectangular raised beds, all designed for function, not form. With raised boxes, it's easier to rotate the vegetables each year. 



IF you can remember what was planted where, the year before. 
The benefits to crop rotatation? Many of the plants that are in the same "family group" have diseases in common. Many of these diseases are difficult, or impossible, to control using chemicals. For example, don't plant tomatoes in the spot where you had potatoes last year, and vice versa. That could spread late blight disease. The best solution for disease control is crop rotation. 

Of course, choosing resistant varieties of vegetables can help thwart diseases. For example, tomatoes with a "V" "F" and/or "N" after their names indicates resistance to verticillium wilt, fusarium wilt and nematodes. However, most heirloom varieties of vegetables offer little or no disease resistance...another good argument for crop rotation. For heirlooms, choose those varieties that are meant to grow in the area you live. And, it helps to spread an inch or two of compost over all your garden beds before you plant each year.
Another reason for crop rotation: to replenish nutrients to the soil. Vegetables tend to be heavy nitrogen users. Giving your soil an "off-year" every few years by planting cover crops allows it a chance to reduce pest populations while building up valuable soil nutrients, as well as beneficial fungi and bacteria. 

Not a Cover Crop
Annual cover crops that do well here in California for the warm weather seasons: buckwheat, cowpeas, soybeans and black eye peas. 






Vetch. Not kvetch.


For the cool weather seasons: bell or fava beans, winter peas, vetch, clover. All of these can add more nitrogen to the soil.








An excellent online reference for cover crops: the Peaceful Valley Farm Supply Catalog. That publication also points out several other benefits to crop rotation:
• Increases organic matter

• Increases earthworms and beneficial microorganisms

• Stabilizes soil to prevent erosion

• Brings deep-rooted minerals to the surface

• Provides habitat, nectar, and pollen for beneficial insects while choking out weeds

• Improves water, root and air penetration of soil

• Increases the soil’s moisture-holding capacity

• Breaks up subsoil and plow-soles

• Provides aesthetic value and color (artistic!)
Which brings us back to my original quandary...how to remember exactly what was planted where, each year. Garden gnomes (cleverly disguised as possums) steal the signs; leaving crop remnants in each bed could add to pest and disease problems; writing down the location of crops each year would work...if you remember to go back in the house to check your garden notebook before starting the task of planting each year (ha!). 
One solution that may work is a circular garden, consisting of six raised beds formed to look like spokes emanating from a hub...a pizza garden, if you will. 
There are definite benefits to having a garden in the shape of a circle: a central water source in the middle of the circle, perhaps a small tool shed in that hub area, and compacted walkways three or four feet wide (big enough for a wheelbarrow) to avoid stepping on the garden soil. And it just might be an easy way to remember to rotate crops each season. 
    
Here's the general idea for the Circular Crop Rotation Garden. The crops are arranged so that every three years, the soil gets a break: either nitrogen-fixing crops such as peas and beans are planted; or, a cover crop and compost are added to replenish the soil. Also, crops that tend not to be heavy nitrogen users are situated right before the "rest year". In this case, root crops and leafy crops precede beds that are in minimal use (cover crops or peas/beans). The heavy nitrogen-using beds are directly opposite each other: tomatoes, peppers, etc. are opposite the corn and cucurbits.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

It's Crop Rotation Time! Do You Have Room?

    August is a confusing time for many California gardeners. The tomatoes, peppers, beans, melons, etc. are just reaching their harvesting peak. And yet, August is the best time for starting the winter vegetable garden! 

     Among the vegetable seeds that can be sown during August and September here in California's Central Valley: beets, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, chard, collards, endive, fennel, kale, kohlrabi, leeks, head lettuce, mustard, onion seed, white potatoes, radish, rutabaga and brussels sprouts. In September, many of those same crops can be planted in the garden from transplants from the nursery, including leaf lettuce (leaf lettuce seed goes dormant in warm soil this time of year).

     The problem is, where are you going to plant them?

     With a crop rotation plan, the problem is solved. By having a series of garden planting areas, one or more areas can lay dormant (fallow) from late spring through mid-summer. Then, in August-September, you'll have the room for the winter veggies, while still harvesting your summer bounty from the other beds. For best results, any fallow bed, including any bare beds in the winter, should have a cover crop or compost, to replenish the soil with nutrients.
Rotate Crops Clockwise
      
     Another advantage of having a series of garden beds in the same area: each crop can be irrigated according to its specific needs. For example, as onions and garlic mature in May, watering should be reduced. But that is also the time that summer crops such as tomato and pepper plants need regular watering. An automatic irrigation system, such as battery operated timers that attach to outdoor water faucets, can customize the amount of water for each bed. In the circular garden, the water faucets can be centrally located in the middle for ease of operation.


     Why rotate your backyard garden crops? Many of the plants that are in the same "family group" have diseases in common. Many of these diseases are difficult, or impossible, to control using chemicals. The best solution for disease control is crop rotation. 


     Also, choose resistant varieties of vegetables to help thwart diseases. For example, tomatoes with a "V" "F" and/or "N" after their names indicates resistance to verticillium wilt, fusarium wilt and nematodes. 


     For crops with no resistant varieties, choose those varieties that are meant to grow in the area you live. And, it helps to spread an inch or two of compost over all your garden beds before you plant each year.




CROP ROTATION FOR THE HOME GARDEN
YEAR 1
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
YEAR 2
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
YEAR 3
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans


YEAR 4
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots

YEAR 5
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant

YEAR 6
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.

ANNUAL COVER CROPS FOR CALIFORNIA
Warm Weather: Buckwheat, cowpeas, soybeans, black eye peas.
Cool Weather: bell or fava beans, winter peas, vetch, clover.


Monday, August 17, 2009

Crop Rotation Plan for the Home Garden

   
     Why rotate your backyard garden crops? Many of the plants that are in the same "family group" have diseases in common. Many of these diseases are difficult, or impossible, to control using chemicals. The best solution for disease control is crop rotation. 

     Also, choose resistant varieties of vegetables to help thwart diseases. For example, tomatoes with a "V" "F" and/or "N" after their names indicates resistance to verticillium wilt, fusarium wilt and nematodes. 

     For crops with no resistant varieties, choose those varieties that are meant to grow in the area you live. And, it helps to spread an inch or two of compost over all your garden beds before you plant each year.



CROP ROTATION FOR THE HOME GARDEN
YEAR 1
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
YEAR 2
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
YEAR 3
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans


YEAR 4
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots

YEAR 5
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant

YEAR 6
BED 1
BED 2
BED 3
BED 4
BED 5
BED 6
Tomato
Pepper
Okra
Potato
Eggplant
Onions
Garlic
Beets
Carrots
Peas
Beans
Squash
Pumpkins
Melons
Cucumbers
Corn
Cabbage, Lettuce
Spinach, Radish
Turnip, Broccoli,
Brussels sprouts
Kale, Cauliflower,
Mustard
Spread compost.
Plant a cover crop.

ANNUAL COVER CROPS FOR CALIFORNIA
Warm Weather: Buckwheat, cowpeas, soybeans, black eye peas.
Cool Weather: bell or fava beans, winter peas, vetch, clover.