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Fall Gardening Essentials for Beginners

I’ve been growing food with my family for twenty years, and some of those years have yielded less than spectacular results. We’ve gone full circle from a huge shared co-op garden with a friend to home-built, square-foot beds.

Gardening has served us at every stage of life.

We’ve canned beans, tomato sauce, and jellies because we had to, and in the later years because we wanted to.

Growing our own food wasn’t just something we did because we needed to. Learning to produce healthy, clean, nutritious foods was something I always wanted to do for my family.

Gardening brought us a million returns on our investment. It taught our kids where food comes from. The children learned to try new foods because they planted and tended them together as a family.

Gardening helped cut our grocery bill and fill the kids’ tummies with good things.

Now, the grandkids are excited to come over and fill up a bucket of cherry tomatoes, eat nasturtium blossoms, and watch the honey bees do their work.

Do you want to like gardening even more than you do now? Are you ready to grow more than house plants and tomatoes?

The Adequate Gardener has You Covered

Get ready to try new foods! You will decorate your outside spaces and garden beds with a few more flowers this year. I will help you create a plan.

We will talk about soil prep, choosing seeds for your growing area, raised beds, pests, and so much more. You don’t need to know anything about growing, but by this time next year, you will be celebrating your first successful year of gardening.

You can still grow a little something this fall…

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    We don’t have to be experts to grow great gardens. I am an adequate gardener, and I am happy to be so!

    So, we might not be able to can enough food to get your family through winter. I can’t help you propagate a new species or produce enough blooms for the farmers’ market, but together, we can grow some precious heirloom tomatoes that are going to make a sandwich you will never believe.

    We are going to add beauty to your summer and confidence to your garden skills.

    You will find tips, tools, and printable resources to help you plan, dream, and grow foods you will love with success.


    First-time growers love Chard's quick-growing ease

    17 Beginner Vegetable Gardening Tips to Get You Growing

    Starting a vegetable garden might feel like diving into the deep end with no floaties—but it doesn’t have to! If you’re a brand-new gardener or simply someone who’s struggled in the past, this guide is for you. We’ll walk through 17 practical, realistic tips to help you build confidence and grow your first successful vegetable garden. You will be growing your own food and enjoying healthy plants this growing season.

    Start Small and Manageable

    The biggest mistake most beginner gardeners make? Going too big, too fast. It’s tempting to turn your whole backyard into a farm the minute spring rolls around—but trust me, it’s better to start small. 

    1. Go Small in Your Garden Beds. 

    When your garden space is manageable, it’s easier to keep up with watering, weeding, and harvesting. You’ll also be less likely to burn out or get discouraged. A single raised bed, a handful of containers on the patio, or a 4×4 plot is more than enough for your first season. Don’t be tempted to overhaul your backyard or try to grow the veggies your family will need for the year; you can, but your first year growing is a time to learn how to be the most successful beginner gardener possible.

    2. Be Selective in Your Plant Choices

    Small isn’t referring to your growing space alone. Think small when choosing your first crops, too. Choose a few seed packets or young plants from the local garden center for 3–5 core crops to focus on and learn the rhythm of the season. Once you’ve got the hang of it, you can expand. Gardening is a journey—not a sprint! Plant less so you can pay attention to the rhythms of your garden space. Also, no one needs thirty zucchini or the frustration of learning to can a bumper crop of tomatoes in their first growing season.

    3. Choose a Space That Fits Your Needs.

    Consider your growing space. Nowhere is impossible for a small garden. You can maximize your small space for growing. Square-foot gardening lends itself to the city as well as the country. A simple 2×4 raised bed with a trellis can produce a good quantity of food, add beauty with flowers, and fit on a back patio. We have planted tomatoes in 5-gallon buckets from the hardware store with great success. 

    Plan for the physical needs of your family members. A raised platform is an excellent substitute for an in-ground garden. My mother has several raised garden carts that can be accessed without kneeling or bending. There are no limitations for you as a grower. You can bring your family together by making growing spaces that are accessible to your whole family.

    4. Make Small Choices to Support a Growing Lifestyle

    Visit the local farmers’ market and garden center. You can see firsthand the types of vegetables that are successful in the different parts of the growing season. You can observe local gardens and landscaping while you are out to see what plants are most common where you live. This is a great way to know which are the easiest vegetables and plants to grow where you are. 

    Make what you grow a BIG feature of your meals. Include your produce in several ways by planning ahead and checking out new recipes that incorporate your produce in fun ways.

    – The Adequate Gardener

    Choose Easy-to-Grow Vegetables


    Some veggies are drama queens. Others just quietly do their thing and grow without fuss. As a beginner, go with the reliable performers: radishes, lettuce, bush beans, zucchini, cherry tomatoes, and peas are all excellent choices. 

    5. Look at the GERMINATION time on the seed packet or plant tag. 

    Plants that germinate quickly don’t need fancy soil amendments and are forgiving if you forget to water once or twice. We love planting radishes at the first opportunity in our garden. We are eating delicious Pink Lady radishes in twenty-one days. That is as close to instant satisfaction as you can get in gardening. Lettuce, greens, peas, and beans are quick-growing cool-season crops.

    6. Harvest the Whole Crop at Once

    We use a practice that is sometimes confused with crop rotation. Crop rotation happens from season to season, changing plants to assure they get the best nutrients and avoid disease. Instead, succession planting is the practice of planting one crop after the first is mature. Plants like bush beans are meant to be harvested all at the same time. You can keep picking more beans, and you will have some large woody ones and some too small to eat, OR you can pull the whole plant up. When you harvest the entire plant after picking the most deliciously tender beans you’ve ever had, you will make room for planting warm-season crops like peppers and tomatoes.  

    7. Choose Herbs for a Permanent Placement

    Herbs like basil and chives are also great gateway plants. Bonus: they look and smell amazing while growing. Growing success early on builds your confidence, so stack the deck in your favor with vegetables that want to thrive. Herbs are easy to add to every meal. They are a great way to help develop the habit of eating from the garden.

    Not all of us grew up with vegetables; it takes time to change our eating habits. Child development experts say it takes twenty interactions with a new food for a child to accept it. At our house, we use plates with dividers for the grandkids (who are a little bit picky). One section is for new foods. They don’t have to eat, taste, or try it. I offer new foods to them without much fuss and tell them they can squash it, smell it, lick it, or try it if they like. They like the squishing option. They can’t say yuck or toss it away. New foods can stay in the “No Thank You Zone” for the meal if they don’t want to try it today. They try a lot of new foods the first time and have given up some aversions over time because we keep reintroducing foods.

    Growing your food is one of the best ways to help you try new foods and get your kids to try them, too.

    – The Adequate Gardener

    Use Good Quality Soil or Raised Beds


    Your plants live in the soil, so give them a good home. If your backyard soil is rocky or compacted, don’t waste time trying to fix it right away—just build a raised bed or use large containers. 

    8. Start With a Great Soil Mix 

    Fill your raised garden bed with a quality soil mix: one part compost, one part peat moss or coconut coir, and one part vermiculite or perlite. This “Mel’s Mix,” made famous by the Square Foot Gardening Method, drains well, holds moisture, and gives your plants a rich nutrient base. Good soil is the secret sauce of every thriving garden. Don’t skimp here—it pays off all season long.

    9. Add New Organic Matter to Refresh Your Growing Spaces

    We have added bags of organic matter to our square-foot garden each year. A few inches of this adds the nutrients and minerals our plants will need. We have added well-seasoned litter from the chicken house (back when we had them), bags of rabbit pellets from the local 4-H kids, and homemade compost. Coffee shops often share space with gardeners. It is a good habit to incorporate feeding your garden into your daily rhythm.

    10. Learn More About Your Soil

    You can correct almost any problem soil, but you need to know what you have first. You can purchase a soil test kit and become your own researcher, or you can send a sample in for analysis with a collection kit. You can save if you have a County Extension Office nearby. They are an excellent resource for a new gardener.

    Here in Iowa, you can submit a soil sample to the Iowa State University for $8. You will receive your results, and the extension office staff will provide advice on addressing any soil type issues.

    Cote

    Pay Attention to Sunlight
    Most veggies need 6–8 hours of full sun a day. 

    11. The best time to understand how much sun you have in your growing space is before you plant.

    Take a few days to observe your yard, patio, or balcony. Make a Sun Map to record your findings. Notice where the sun falls and how it shifts throughout the day. Ideally, do this throughout the whole year. I remember purchasing full-sun plants for a sunny space in early spring. I was so excited to start growing something pretty after a long and frosty winter. After the trees on the other side of the lane leafed out, the spot I had planted them in was in deep shade. When you think about the sun map, think of all seasons and all growth cycles of the plants nearby.

    12. Choose Your Growing Space With Your Sun Needs in Mind

    South-facing spaces typically get the best light. If you are in a hot climate, choose a shaded area. Six hours is excellent for garden plants, but beyond that, you can make your space work. If you’re limited on full sun spots, don’t worry—you can still grow leafy greens, herbs, and root vegetables in partial sun. Use your sun map to help you track the light in your chosen growing space. The better you match your crops to your light conditions, the happier your plants (and your harvest) will be.

    Water Consistently (But Don’t Drown Your Plants!)


    Plants like their soil moist but not soggy—think of it like a wrung-out sponge. Overwatering is one of the easiest ways to kill a plant, especially in containers or poorly draining soil. Overwatering or a lack of good drainage can cause rotting roots and fungal diseases. Too much water can affect the quality of your fruits, such as poor tomato plants and mild hot peppers.

    13. Set a simple watering routine

    Morning is the best time to water, giving leaves time to dry before nightfall. Stick your finger into the soil—if the top inch is dry, it’s time to water. If you want a visual aid for little helpers, we set out an open tuna can in the garden when the kids water. Place the can in the area to be watered. When the can fills up, you know the area has received an inch of water, and you can move to the next spot. This helped me realize I was giving the beds enough water and avoid wasting time.

    14. Mulching your garden

    You can use straw, shredded leaves, or wood chips to help retain moisture at the soil surface. Mulch will reduce how often you need to water. I am always looking for ways to lessen my workload. Mulch is my TOP PICK in the garden because it creates a physical barrier against water loss. This means I need less time to water plants. Water problems can run the other way if you have sandy soils. You may need to add organic matter to help hold water deeper for your plants’ roots. Consistency is the goal, not perfection.


    Keep Pests in Check with Natural Methods

    You don’t need to douse your garden in chemicals to protect it. 

    15. Practice Companion Planting

    Especially in a small vegetable garden, the right mix of plants can help repel the pests that love your plants. You can add flowers with a purpose in the garden and reap the beauty and benefits. Sow chives with your carrots, plant catnip, and cabbage. This year, we finally put in an asparagus bed, and I learned that Calendula is a great companion plant to deter asparagus beetle. Here is a great resource to help you find companion plants for your plot or raised bed garden.

    16. Pick off bugs you see, and use insecticidal soap or neem oil when needed.

    A barrier, like a fine mesh row cover, can keep many pests at bay. In the garden, we encourage beneficial insects—like ladybugs and lacewings—by planting flowers and avoiding pesticides. We have even purchased ladybugs to reduce aphids. Now, we are in our plant/beekeeping era, so we have a plentiful supply of super pollinators to help with our crops. 

    17. Fall in love with ugly fruits and vegetables.

    If your plants are delicious to a caterpillar or grasshopper, they are probably great for you, too! Observing your garden regularly is vital to the health of your plants (and great for your soul too). Walk in the garden regularly to look for wilting or dropped leaves, pest damage, and signs of stress in your plants. This way, you can head off any significant problems before they ruin your harvest. In the end, a few holes in a leaf won’t ruin your crop. Gardens are ecosystems. Your goal is balance, not a sterile zone.


    Here’s the truth: you’re going to mess up. Plants will die. Insect pests will sneak in. You might plant everything too close together (we’ve all done it!). But you are learning, and that’s part of the fun. Gardening is full of life lessons—patience, observation, problem-solving, and resilience. 

    My personal top BONUS tip is to take photos, keep a journal, and celebrate every sprout. Even the smallest harvest is a huge win. You’re growing food, creating beauty, and connecting with the natural world. That’s no small thing. So go easy on yourself, and enjoy the ride.


    Introduce Yourself (Example Post)

    This is an example post, originally published as part of Blogging University. Enroll in one of our ten programs, and start your blog right.

    You’re going to publish a post today. Don’t worry about how your blog looks. Don’t worry if you haven’t given it a name yet, or you’re feeling overwhelmed. Just click the “New Post” button, and tell us why you’re here.

    Why do this?

    • Because it gives new readers context. What are you about? Why should they read your blog?
    • Because it will help you focus your own ideas about your blog and what you’d like to do with it.

    The post can be short or long, a personal intro to your life or a bloggy mission statement, a manifesto for the future or a simple outline of your the types of things you hope to publish.

    To help you get started, here are a few questions:

    • Why are you blogging publicly, rather than keeping a personal journal?
    • What topics do you think you’ll write about?
    • Who would you love to connect with via your blog?
    • If you blog successfully throughout the next year, what would you hope to have accomplished?

    You’re not locked into any of this; one of the wonderful things about blogs is how they constantly evolve as we learn, grow, and interact with one another — but it’s good to know where and why you started, and articulating your goals may just give you a few other post ideas.

    Can’t think how to get started? Just write the first thing that pops into your head. Anne Lamott, author of a book on writing we love, says that you need to give yourself permission to write a “crappy first draft”. Anne makes a great point — just start writing, and worry about editing it later.

    When you’re ready to publish, give your post three to five tags that describe your blog’s focus — writing, photography, fiction, parenting, food, cars, movies, sports, whatever. These tags will help others who care about your topics find you in the Reader. Make sure one of the tags is “zerotohero,” so other new bloggers can find you, too.