7 Tips for a Low-Maintenance Vegetable Garden

Growing your own food can be fun, fulfilling, and delicious. It can also be a ton of work — hauling compost, planting seeds, and battling weeds and pests — before you get the chance to harvest the fruits (and vegetables) of your labor.

There’s no way to make gardening effortless. (And why would you want to? That’s part of the fun!) But over 15 years of growing veggies, herbs, and more in raised beds at home and in community garden plots, I’ve learned a few tips and tricks that can help you save time, effort, and frustration in the process from seed to harvest.

Here are some things to keep in mind, whether you’re starting your first garden or just getting your old garden restarted for the spring.

Get plants or seeds delivered

If you’re like me, you enjoy making the annual spring trip to your local garden center or big box store to choose plants by hand. If you’re also like me, you don’t always have the time during this busy season, or maybe you want certain plants or seeds that aren’t available in your area. The solution? Get plants, seeds, and more delivered.

Our guide to garden delivery services lists a ton of places to source edible and ornamental plants, native pollinator seeds, flowers, and more. I personally like to use Southern Exposure Seed Exchange for seeds like “Sugar Ann” dwarf snap peas and Experimental Farm Network for really rare, unique varieties.

Choose the right crops

Set yourself up for success in the garden by dialing in your plant selection. Assess your level of experience, the time you can commit, and the space you have, then choose crops that fit what you can offer.

For example, if you’re a beginning gardener who dreams of biting into your very own juicy tomatoes, think about starting out with relatively easy-growing cherry tomatoes rather than jumping straight to a fancy heirloom variety that might be a little more particular about its care. If all you have to grow in is a few containers on your patio, start with compact, quick-growing plants like lettuce, kale, and radishes that will fit your space and be ready to harvest in as little as a few weeks.

Begin with veggie starts

Gardening is often about tradeoffs: You can save a bundle by purchasing and planting crops like tomatoes and peppers from seed, it’s true. But growing from seed takes longer, takes up space indoors, and can require an investment in gear like grow lights and heating mats to give those baby plants the conditions they need to thrive.

The solution? Let someone else do the work for you. Get a jump on the growing season by purchasing seedlings, also called starts. Your local nursery, garden center, or friendly farmer has used their professional know-how to make sure your plants are healthy and ready to thrive. Buying a six-pack of tomato starts might cost more than buying a packet of seeds, but you get to skip the time and hassle of DIYing.

Note that there are some beginner-friendly plants that sprout so quickly and easily that planting from seed is worth it, like kale, Swiss chard, lettuce, radishes, beans, and peas.

Cabbage nets

Netting can help you make sure you don’t have to share your vegetables with the neighborhood deer and rabbits.

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Use row cover

Weeds aren’t your only enemies in the garden. Insect pests are hungry for your plants, and the best way to protect your garden from them is prevention. You can do this with row cover, also known as floating row cover or reemay. It’s a fine, transparent fabric that lets in light and water while keeping insect pests away from your plants.

For example, in many regions of the US, brassicas like kale, arugula, cabbage, mustard greens, turnip greens, and radishes fall prey to the harlequin bug, which can chew healthy leaves down to the stem in just a few days. Protecting your seedlings with row cover and low hoops in spring before the bugs emerge, then keeping them covered, will ensure that these annoying insects can’t chow down on all your hard work.

Bugs aren’t the only pests who want to chow down on your crops. Birds, rodents like squirrels and groundhogs, rabbits, and deer could be ready to nibble on your garden, depending on where you live. It can be tougher to keep these critters away — netting, fencing, or planting resistant varieties can help — so contact your local cooperative extension for guidance.

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