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Blog Series - Intensive Planting (Part 2 Closely Spaced Planting)

Posted on November 27, 2009 at 12:43 PM

There are many of us who have limited space availability for food production gardening and yet still manage to produce a tremendous amount of our own food supply.   This post is part of a blog series devoted to exploring the many techniques available to optimize food production gardening.   There are quite a few topics that relate to this pursuit - including (among others):

  • Crop Selection
  • Intensive Planting Practices
  • Season Extension
  • Soil Management & Fertility

The blog series was kicked off by focusing on Crop Selection.   Now we are exploring Intensive Planting Practices.   Intensive planting techniques generally include a combination of planting in raised beds (either double dug or otherwise greatly amended and improved), closely spaced planting, intercropping and succession planting, and the use of vertical growing techniques – all for the purpose of producing the same amount of food in approximately 20% of the space used by traditional row gardening practices.   Last week we focused in on the topic of Raised Beds.   This week we will keep moving through the intensive planting techniques by spending some time discussing closely spaced planting practices.   

       

Closely Spaced Planting –                   

Taking full advantage of the greater planting area provided by a raised wide bed is the next critical technique of intensive planting.   The idea of closely spaced planting is to take the one-dimensional row planting process and make it two-dimensional by planting the raised bed using within-row spacing in all directions.   This greatly increases the quantity of a crop that can be produced in a given planting area. The plants are spaced such that when mature, their leaves should just barely touch.   This close spacing provides an additional benefit (besides efficient space utilization) in that it provides a mini-climate and living mulch that reduces weed growth and helps hold moisture in the soil.                                  

           

For those who use the square foot gardening techniques of planting in grids this should not be a new concept.     The square foot method recommends using a grid of squares dividing every square foot into a number of sub-squares appropriate to the spacing of the crop being grown.    Similarly, the Grow Biointensive method employs a hexagonal pattern using various hexagonal and triangular shaped planting jigs with the spacing dictated by what is appropriate for the specific crop.     Wide row gardening uses a scattered broadcasting of seeds that is later thinned using a common garden rake (if needed).   Another variation I have seen is to just plant a traditional row across the width of the bed using the optimal spacing between each seed, then mark the distance from that row to the next row that gives the optimal plant distance and then plant another row and keep doing this until the bed area is planted up.   This year, I have seen one more method that achieves this result – Annies Granny has created her own tissue paper seed mats which do a great job of ensuring optimal spacing.            

        

I personally most often use a combination of the square foot grid system and wide row block planting.   I have also used the multiple rows method a time or two but it is not my usual method.   My bed widths and lengths are all in increments of 4 feet - so it makes it very easy to employ the square foot method of using a grid of squares and sub- squares.   I use block planting for large beds of spinach, carrots, garden peas, and bush beans.    In this next picture, you can see some of both methods.   The broccoli (with the copper collars) in the foreground is planted in 1 foot square grids.   Behind it is a block planting of spinach.                                       

                   

   

  

This is one area of my gardening that I can stand to most improve upon and as such, it represents my best opportunity to further increase my yields.   Specifically, I am guilty of doing two things:

  1. When I use broadcast block seeding for spinach and carrots I tend to not do the required rake thinning or I am not aggressive enough with it when I do.   The consequence is that I often end up with areas in the bed that are too closely spaced, which causes plants to be small and not reach their potential. 
  2. My trenching method for planting potatoes produces a reliable crop of potatoes each year but it leaves a wide section between each trench that is essentially unused.   I should be getting much more production out of each 100 square feet of growing bed than I currently am.   For example, in 2009 I had 208 square feet of bed area planted in potatoes and I got a yield of 120 pounds (would have been about 140 but I lost some to late blight).   This works out to approximately 70 pounds per 100 square feet of growing bed.   An average expected production for potatoes per 100 square feet of intensively planted growing bed should be 200 lbs!   Obviously, I can do better than I am on this crop.

My plan to address these issues is to continue using broadcast seeding for beans and peas because the size of the seed makes it very easy to do a good job of spacing with them and I have had no issues with those two crops.   For the spinach and carrots, I may give Annies Granny’s tissue paper seed mats a try or go the route of the multiple rows method.   I am not a fan of the square foot grid method for large plantings of these closely spaced crops because it is just too time consuming to do a large area in this manner.   As for the potatoes, I am going to give a deep grid planting a try.   John Jeavon’s recommends just planting potatoes as you double dig, placing the seed potatoes on the top of the lower trench of loosened and amended soil and then covering them with the soil from the next trench’s upper level as you work your way down the bed. He recommends spacing 9 inches and then offsetting the next trench to create the Biointensive hexagonal grid pattern.   I think it would be simpler to use a 12-inch spacing and just do a typical square foot gardening squared grid.   I am not sure if I will do a full double dig on the potato beds, but at a minimum I will do a full u-bar aeration and then plant them deeply on the grid spacing.    I will likely need to add a heavy mulch layer to get full production out of the bed since I will not be backfilling a trench.   I will have to think about what to use for that layering because when I have used straw for that in the past, I ended up with an explosion in the slug population.                       

          

Do you use closely spaced planting techniques? 

Categories: Blog Series, Garden Beds, Plants

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10 Comments

Reply Daphne
03:34 PM on November 27, 2009
I tend to use the multiple row method for carrots, spinach and peas. I find it easier to weed that way. I don't use a hoe, but it is still easier just to pull out anything not in the row. It also makes it quicker to thin since you are just doing it in a line. I find the rows use less seed. I'm also better at covering the seed the appropriate depth along a line. It is harder to do that when you broadcast. But the broadcast method is quicker to seed over a large area. My garden is about a third the size of yours, so I have a lot less to seed.
Reply kitsapfreedomgardener
10:35 PM on November 27, 2009
Daphne - I may very well end up using the multiple row method again for spinach and carrots. I want to give AG's tissue mat system a try too so I may do some of both.
Reply Dan
10:54 PM on November 27, 2009
I'm using Granny's seed mats next year too. I am also going to plant as much as I can in block appose to the rows that I have been doing. My rows have been such a waste of space. Love those equally spaced plants in the photo!
Reply hsheather
06:11 PM on November 28, 2009
I made seed tapes this year for carrots with very poor results. The difference may have been that I did not check to see how well they dissolved. I'm going to have to look again at AGs system, because it would really solve the issues of overseeding some areas while underseeding others.
I'm currently in the process of going from sloped beds to actual raised beds. It will be interesting to see the difference next year in production between the 2 different bed types. Since none of my current sloped beds have been double dug, I'm hoping the change will be for the better. I have a bad back from years of working as a nurse and need to get my beds to a point that they are more back friendly.
Reply kitsapfreedomgardener
09:12 PM on November 28, 2009
Dan - I am always amazed at how much produce you get from your garden so if you kick it up another notch it is going to be quite impressive!

hsheather - I think carrots would be the hardest to do with the seed tapes or mats unless they really dissolve easily because carrot seedlings are notoriously weak and easily fail. I am looking forward to following your progress with the new beds next year.
Reply Sustainable Eats
11:18 PM on November 28, 2009
I wonder how much of this is how one thinks. For some reason the block thing just doesn't work for me. I think linearly and prefer rows but I do space them close together which is essentially a grid. In between rows I try to plant another row of something that needs shading from the bigger thing or would ripen first before the first row item would be ready. It probably is SFG but I'm in denial.
Reply Thomas
12:07 AM on November 29, 2009
Thanks the great information here! And I love how neat your rows look. I've been interested in intensive veggie gardening ever since I started reading about the Dervaes Family in California and seeing how much they produced from such a small plot of land. I really like Gran's technique for directly seeded crops and will most likely use some sort of square foot gardening technique for transplants next year.
Reply kitsapfreedomgardener
01:00 AM on November 29, 2009
Sustainable Eats - There are lots of ways to do the same thing, essentially the multi rows, square foot grid, block planting, and the diagonal patterns of the grow biointensive methods - all achieve the same end of planting densely such that the plants optimize the growing area avilable to it, but no more than that. Planting between the rows with a faster growing crops or one that is okay with the later shade is the next topic in the blog series - intercropping and succession planting!

Thomas - The Dervaes are truly an inspiration and have this down to an art and a science. I particularly like the square foot grid for setting out transplants.
Reply TSwain
04:12 PM on February 01, 2010
There's good info here. I did a search on the topic and found most people will agree with your blog. Keep up the good work mate!
Reply g.a karpel jr
10:33 PM on April 27, 2010
I just discovered your blog and I think is outstanding and very informative. I have been doing a lot of the same but am still in the pioneer stage. Always lokking for new and better idea's. I presently have about 300' ofvraised beds X 4' wide. Working towards no till and definately organic. Keep up the good work and thanks for the info.