Crop rotation in home vegetable garden –
Crop rotation in home vegetable garden
Crop rotation is one of the gardener’s oldest secrets for a beautiful and bountiful harvest. You are already practicing simple crop rotation if you avoid planting the same vegetable in the same place each year. Most gardeners practice crop rotation for several important reasons.
By rotating crops, you will prevent the build-up of pests that might result if the same crop were grown in the same spot year after year. Some plants are susceptible to diseases, therefore planting in the same location continuously, the soil may harbor the disease, waiting to infect the next year’s crop. You will also make better use of soil nutrients, since different crops remove nutrients from the soil at different rates.
Vegetable Family Categories
Plants are categorized into families according to the growing habits, requirements, and sometimes the parts eaten. There are many families in the plant world, but below are the most common garden vegetables grown. Each family should be grouped together in your garden. Some have only one member that can grow in a home vegetable garden such as corn or okra. These vegetables are in a family all their own making them an easy fit to grow wherever another family has been lately. In a small garden, you can group some families together such as Cruciferae with Leguminosae to make rotations easier.
- Chenopodiaceae – beet, spinach, and Swiss chard.
- Composite – lettuce, and sunflower
- Convolvulace – sweet potato
- Cruciferae – broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, kale, kohlrabi, Brussels sprouts, turnip, rutabaga, radish, Chinese cabbage, mustard green, and collard
- Cucurbitaceae – summer squash, winter squash, cucumber, pumpkin, melon (cantaloupe and watermelon), and gourd
- Gramineae – corn
- Leguminosae, Legume – bean, pea, lentil, peanut, and soybean
- Liliaceae – onion, leek, garlic, and asparagus
- Malvaceae – okra
- Polygonaceae – rhubarb
- Solanaceae – tomato, potato, pepper (sweet and hot), and eggplant
- Umbelliferae – carrots, celery, parsnip, fennel, parsley, and dill
- Legume – bean, lentil, peanut, soybean, and pea
- Root – carrot, onion, turnip, garlic, beet, sweet potato, kohlrabi, rutabaga, potato, and radish
- Fruit – cucumber, tomato, squash, eggplant, peppers, sunflower, boccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, pumpkin, grourd, and melons
- Leaf – lettuce, greens, herbs, cabbage, Swiss chard, kale, collard, and spinach
- Extras – corn and okra