To grow veg at home, map frost timing, prep soil, set spacing, water well, and mulch for steady harvests.
Starting a kitchen patch feels doable when you break it into clear steps. This guide shows what to do, when to do it, and why it works. You’ll learn how to read frost dates, build soil, set a layout, and plant popular crops with the right depth and spacing. By the end, you’ll have a plan you can print and follow outside with a trowel in hand.
Planting Veg In A Backyard Plot: Step-By-Step
1) Check Frost Dates And Growing Window
Your timing starts with the last spring chill and the first autumn chill. Warm-season crops like tomatoes and courgettes hate cold nights. Cool-season crops like lettuce and peas shrug off light chills and even prefer them. Look up a local “last frost” date by postcode, then set sowing dates back or forward from that marker. Perennials care more about hardiness zones; annual veg care more about frost-free days.
2) Test And Prep The Soil
Healthy beds drain well, yet hold moisture. Aim for a crumbly texture that forms a loose ball in your hand. Blend in mature compost across the surface, two to three centimetres deep, then rake smooth. If your soil is heavy, create raised rows or beds so spring rain can run off. If it’s sandy, compost and a thin mulch will help hold water between spells.
3) Plan The Layout
Sunlight wins; pick a spot with six to eight hours. Group crops by height so tall plants sit on the north side and don’t shade the rest. Leave paths wide enough for a wheelbarrow. Write labels before you sow so you remember which row is which. Rotate plant families each year to keep pests guessing and to balance nutrients.
4) Plant At The Right Depth And Spacing
Seeds go two to three times as deep as their largest side. Transplants sit so the soil line matches the pot line, except tomatoes, which can be set deeper to root along the stem. Give each plant the space it needs for air and root growth. Tight spacing grows small, tender leaves; wider spacing encourages large heads and fruiting.
5) Water, Mulch And Feed
Moisten the root zone, not the leaves. Early mornings are best. A slow soak once or twice a week beats frequent light sprinkles. Add a mulch layer once the soil warms; it keeps moisture in and knocks back weeds. Feed little and often with well-rotted compost or a balanced feed, backing off late in the season so fruit can ripen.
6) Scout For Problems
Look for holes, yellowing, and sticky residue. Remove slugs by hand, use netting on brassicas, and water the base to avoid leaf disease. If something fails, re-sow with a fast crop like radish or salad mix and keep the bed productive.
Vegetable Planting At-A-Glance
Use this quick table to time sowing and set basic spacing. Adjust dates to your own frost window and seed packet notes.
| Vegetable | When To Sow/Plant | Typical Spacing |
|---|---|---|
| Lettuce | Direct sow early spring; repeat little and often | 20–25 cm |
| Peas | Direct sow from cool spring soil | 5 cm in row; rows 45 cm |
| Carrots | Direct sow once soil is workable | Thin to 5–7 cm |
| Beetroot | Direct sow mid spring | 7–10 cm |
| French beans | Sow after frost or start in modules | 15–20 cm |
| Tomatoes | Start indoors; set out after frost | 45–60 cm |
| Courgettes | Start indoors; harden off then plant | 90 cm |
| Brassicas | Raise modules; plant out in firm soil | 45 cm+ depending on crop |
| Onions | Sets in early spring | 10 cm |
| Spinach | Direct sow in cool spells | 10–15 cm |
Basic Tools And Materials
What You’ll Use Often
A hand trowel, a narrow hoe, a measuring stick, plant labels, a watering can with a rose, and a sturdy bucket cover most jobs. Add stakes, twine, and soft ties for tomatoes and climbing beans. A cheap rain gauge helps you time irrigation. Keep a notebook or notes app to log sowing dates, varieties, and harvests.
Soil Builders
Keep a small bin for homemade compost, a bag of peat-free potting mix for seed trays, and a bale of straw or shredded leaves for mulch. For heavy ground, keep a sack of coarse grit or sharp sand to open the texture. For containers, mix compost into potting soil to boost water holding.
Get Your Timing Right
Many new growers plant too early and lose tender seedlings to a cold snap. Others start late and miss the best window for leafy greens. Use frost-date calculators and local planting charts to time each crop; the RHS sowing guide explains outdoor and indoor starts in plain terms. Then record your own dates so you can tweak next year. Weather swings happen; row covers and cloches add a safety net and extend both ends of the season.
Soil That Helps Plants Thrive
Run A Simple Test
Grab a clear jar and add one third soil and two thirds water. Shake and let it settle. A banded look tells you if sand or clay dominates. If water sits on top after a rain, lift beds and add grit and compost. If water vanishes in minutes, blend in extra organic matter to build sponge-like structure.
Feed Without Overdoing It
Leafy veg like steady nitrogen, while fruiting crops want extra potassium once flowers set. Compost gives slow release and buffers mistakes. Too much rich feed produces lush leaves and fewer roots or fruit, so keep it moderate and steady. A soil kit each spring helps you match inputs to need.
Mulch For Fewer Weeds
Once the soil warms, spread two to five centimetres of straw, shredded leaves, or compost around plants. This blocks tiny weeds, keeps moisture in, and protects shallow roots. Top up thin patches as the season moves along.
Layout That Makes Work Easy
Pick A Bed Size You Can Reach
Beds one to 1.2 metres wide let you reach from both sides without stepping on the soil. Keep paths simple and weed-free, using wood chips or cardboard under a thin mulch. A fixed bed size also helps you plan crop rotation year to year.
Group By Family
Brassicas together, legumes together, roots together, fruiting nightshades together. Move each group to a fresh bed next season. This habit spreads out feeding needs and breaks pest cycles.
Staking And Trellising
Use single stakes for tomatoes, teepees for climbing beans, and mesh for peas and cucumbers. Tie with soft twine and leave room for stems to thicken. Keep the lower 20–30 cm of tomato stems leaf-free to improve airflow.
Planting Methods That Work
Direct Sowing
Use a string line for straight rows in beds, or scatter and thin for leaf mixes. Water the furrow first, sow into damp soil, then cover. Press gently with the back of a rake to ensure seed-to-soil contact.
Transplanting
Harden seedlings for a week outside in bright shade, then plant on a calm, cloudy day. Water the hole, set the plant, backfill, and water again. A ring of mulch around each plant helps hold moisture.
Containers And Small Spaces
Pots drain fast, so add compost to peat-free potting mix and water deeply. Pick compact types of tomatoes, peppers, and salad leaves. Use a sunny wall to trellis beans and cucumbers, and tuck herbs around the edges.
Watering That Saves Time
Plants like deep drinks, not constant sips. Aim for two to three centimetres of water a week from rain and irrigation combined. A cheap rain gauge tells you what fell. Drip lines or a soaker hose deliver water right to the roots and keep leaves dry, which helps avoid disease on tomatoes and cucurbits.
Check moisture by pushing a finger five centimetres into the soil. If it feels dry, water. If it feels cool and damp, wait a day. Water in the morning so foliage dries quickly and slugs have fewer reasons to linger overnight.
Keep Weeds And Pests Down
Start clean, then shade the ground with dense planting and mulch. Hoe lightly while weeds are small. Cover brassicas with mesh to block cabbage white butterflies. Attract ladybirds and lacewings with mixed flowers along the bed edges. Hand-pick slugs at dusk and use copper bands on pots where slugs are relentless.
Watch for common issues: flea beetle on brassicas, blight on tomatoes and potatoes, mildew on courgettes. Good airflow, steady watering at the base, and clean tools go a long way. Remove heavily affected leaves into the bin rather than the compost heap.
Midseason Care And Harvest
Pinch side shoots on indeterminate tomatoes and tie stems to stakes or twine. Hill soil around potatoes to keep tubers dark. Keep picking beans and courgettes while young and tender to encourage more. Harvest lettuce in the cool morning and chill fast to keep crisp.
When days heat up, give lettuce and spinach a little shade cloth at midday. When nights cool later in the year, add fleece or row cover to hold a few extra degrees and carry crops deeper into autumn.
Simple Rotation Plan For Year Two
Split your space into four beds. Year one: brassicas, legumes, roots, and fruiting crops each get a bed. Year two: move each group one bed forward. Keep salad leaves and quick radishes in gaps as “catch crops” so no space sits idle. This cycle eases pests and keeps feeding balanced.
Common Mistakes And Easy Fixes
| Issue | What You See | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Planting too early | Blackened, limp seedlings | Wait for frost window; use covers |
| Overwatering | Yellow leaves, soft stems | Water deeply, less often |
| Poor spacing | Mildew, small heads | Thin to guide spacing above |
| Shallow sowing | Seeds dry out | Sow two to three times seed size |
| No rotation | Repeat pest outbreaks | Move families yearly |
| Weeding late | Thick mats of roots | Hoe while tiny; mulch |
Trusted Guides For Timing And Spacing
For frost windows and plant hardiness, see the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. For sowing techniques, spacing, and rotation basics that fit a temperate climate, the RHS crop rotation guidance gives clear, practical steps you can apply in any home plot.
Your First Month Action Plan
Week 1
Find the last spring frost date for your postcode. Sketch your space and list sun hours. Order seeds suited to your season and pick compact types if space is tight.
Week 2
Lay out beds and paths. Add compost across the soil surface and rake level. Set stakes or cages where tall crops will go.
Week 3
Sow cool-tolerant leaves and peas outdoors if the soil is ready. Start warmth lovers inside under bright light.
Week 4
Thin seedlings to final spacing. Water deeply once this week if rain is short. Add a light mulch between rows and note your dates in a garden log.
Mini Planting Guides
Leafy Greens
Sow little and often so leaves stay tender. Give steady moisture and pick outer leaves, leaving the centre to regrow. Shade cloth helps in summer heat. For baby leaves, sow densely and cut with scissors; for heads, thin early so hearts can fill.
Roots
Carrots and parsnips like fine, stone-free soil. Sow thinly, then thin again for straight roots. Keep the surface moist until seeds sprout. Beetroot and radish are quick gap-fillers between slower crops like brassicas and sweet corn.
Legumes
Peas climb netting; bush beans stand on their own. Inoculant can boost nodules in low-nitrogen soil. Keep picking to keep pods coming. Once plants finish, chop stems at the base and leave roots in the soil to feed microbes.
Brassicas
Plant in firm soil and use mesh to block butterflies. Feed a little extra nitrogen after planting, then ease off once heads start to form. Space well for airflow and steady growth. Check stems and leaves for caterpillars after rain.
Tomatoes, Peppers, And Co.
Give a warm, bright spot and steady water at the base. Remove lower leaves that touch the soil. Prune and tie as plants grow. Pick fruit at peak colour and store at room temperature for best flavour.
Season Extenders That Pay Off
A simple row cover boosts night temperatures by a couple of degrees and shields crops from insects. Cloches and cold frames warm the soil and help you start a week or two earlier. In autumn, the same gear stretches salads and spinach into late season. Vent on sunny days to avoid heat build-up and keep mildew at bay.
Ready, Set, Plant
Start with a few beds, grow a mix of quick and slow crops, and keep notes. The rhythm stays the same each year: set timing from frost dates, prep soil, choose smart spacing, water well, mulch, and rotate. Stick with that and you’ll pick salads in weeks and sturdy roots by autumn.
