

Let’s get started: First you need to make planting sections You will use the seed spacing/plant spacing number to divide up planting sections to know how many seeds to sow. What you will need is the seed spacing/plant spacing number. Now, we normally do not condone being wasteful, but we want you to take that row spacing number, and throw it away! You won’t need it. If you look on the back of a seed packet you’ll see two types of measurement: Planting by area means taking a square section of garden, and dividing the length and width of that section by the plant spacing needs. It’s a win, win … win! So what do we mean by – ‘plant by area’? Since you don’t need to walk into your garden, your soil never gets compressed, your plants don’t get squished, and your favorite pair of sneakers stay nice and clean. So when you see a gardener with a raised bed that’s 4ft wide, you’ll know that savvy grower can always reach the middle of their growing area! The reason for this dimension is that an average person’s arm can reach at least 2ft.

That’s why great raised gardens always have one dimension of 4ft or less. When you grow a garden in a raised garden bed, the purpose of the bed is to condense your growing area to a point that you can reach all plants, without having to step into the growing area. Row spacing is meant to giving you a walking path between plants, you shouldn’t be walking in a Raised Garden. Here’s what you should be doing: Plant by area, not by rows. Need a planting spacing grid & garden watering system? Check out our Garden Grid™ watering system here. We’ll explain how plant spacing works best when growing in a raised garden, how you can effortlessly partition your garden into equal growing sections, and even give you a plant spacing chart you can share with friends, put on your own website, or just use for yourself so you can grow a garden so great, the Jones’s will have to keep up with you!Īlready understand plant spacing and just want to reference our plant spacing chart? There’s a better way and we’re here to show you the plant spacing ‘light’.īelow we’ll give you a quick tutorial on plant spacing needs for different vegetables.

If you use row planting in your raised garden bed, you’re missing out! You could be growing a lot more, without any extra effort, using square foot gardening.ĭo not worry though, ambitious gardener.
