| As someone who’s not an expert, but has dabbled in gardening, I often get asked what I would recommend as the top five most versatile, beginner-friendly, time-saving, and space-conscious fruits, herbs, or vegetables to grow. The beauty of these recommendations is their practicality, designed to fit into your busy lifestyle and limited gardening space. The better way to answer this question is to provide the askers with options rather than just one primary response of a, b, c, d and e. For that, there is a cap that only sometimes fits everyone. The best way to answer this question is with a range of options, allowing you to experiment and find what works best for you. Time-Saving Growing Tips … When it comes to easy-to-grow and versatile vegetables, I usually suggest a variety of options. These can include salad leaves, rockets, different bean varieties, courgettes, peas, oniony options, tomatoes, peppers, chards, carrots, radishes, and potatoes. I also recommend growing a selection of herbs, strawberries, or blueberries for a touch of sweetness. Adding time-saving and space-conscious options makes the options a little more complicated, so never mind nailing it down to just five. People live busy lives; they work longer hours and have more demands on their time now. They remember those with families or pets and children to contend with. Gardening can be a challenge in these circumstances, but it’s also a rewarding and relaxing activity that can be tailored to fit your schedule and space. |
| 1 The first stage is to identify the easiest-to-grow vegetables available to beginners today. I have listed several options above that fall into that category. It’s pointless growing vegetables that are much harder to maintain. At a push, I might be inclined to suggest oniony options—garlic, onions, shallots, or chives—climbing bean varieties—runners, broad or French, courgettes [zucchini] or maybe even patty pan squash, cut and come again salad leaves like rocket, pak choi, chard, kale, mizuna, or even corn salads. |
| 2 Next, it also helps to choose vegetables you want to grow because you want to consume them. You might be surprised to learn that some beginners grow vegetables they don’t like, but ONLY because they are easy to grow. |
| 3 When it comes to gardening, it’s important to choose your battles wisely. Opt for ‘easy crops’ that require minimal effort and can be a joy to grow. By doing so, you’ll avoid the soul-draining and potentially destructive experience that can come with more demanding plants. Take the time to research your options, focusing on crops that only need basic care such as planting, watering, weeding, and harvesting. Envision a garden free from unnecessary complexities, where the focus is on straightforward and easy-to-grow crops. This is the reality you can create with choices like cut-and-come-again salad, quick pick’em beans, and sow and forget until later season crops like garlic, squashes, and pumpkins. These low-maintenance options are designed to empower you, allowing you to relax and truly enjoy your gardening experience. |
| 4 To cut down on sowing time, I would suggest buying plug plants. These are young plants or saplings that have been sown and grown on already. To plant them, simply dig a hole in your garden bed or container, remove the plant from its pot, and place it in the hole. Fill the hole with soil, firm it gently, and water the plant. This allows the grower to buy them and pop them into the soil at a time more appropriate to the growing seasons. By choosing plug plants, you not only reduce the stress of sowing seeds and dealing with straggly seedlings, but also cater to your space limitations. If you don’t have ample space for multiple modular trays filled with seeds, plug plants are a perfect space-saving solution. Keep in mind, they might come with a slightly higher price tag than a packet of seeds. |
| 5 Another point of interest that newbie gardeners should consider is selecting crops that grow well without regular maintenance in their area. Only grow lemons if you have the proper environmental requirements, and if you can’t easily provide those, then look at the most fundamental requirements for your vegetables. Again, it takes some research into your local area. Ask where you buy your seeds or plants at the nursery and plug what they recommend for beginner fruit and vegetable growers. For example, growing all your salad crops together in one area will make it easier to water, which will mean low maintenance and less strain. |
| 6 When you buy perennials, you’re not just investing in a few plants-you’re opening up a world of possibilities in your garden. Imagine the variety you can have with rhubarb, blueberries, strawberries, herbs, asparagus [for the adventurous ones], spinach varieties, sorrel, chives, horseradish, garlic [think cloves], radicchio, three-cornered leeks, kale, and even flowers like nasturtiums that can be used in your salads, all growing year after year. |
| 7 Identifying how you want to grow your herbs, fruits, and vegetables also requires some thought before you begin to grow anything. Will you grow in your backyard garden directly in the soil or perhaps in raised beds, or use containers and pots on the patio or balcony? Do you have sufficient pots and areas available? Will you be using growing bags? Will you need compost? Will you make your own or buy it? These bags are ideal for aubergines, tomatoes, peppers, and other shallow-rooted crops. If growing potatoes, you can also buy grow bags typically designed for increasing them. The one downside to growing in containers is that they require more watering and supplements than growing crops in the garden or raised beds, so be mindful of this additional labour intensity. However, you could opt for an alternative: plant your pots into the soil directly, as watering will last longer. Dig out the pots from the soil bed at the end of the season. |
| 8 Empower your gardening efforts by always remembering to mulch. By adding a layer of mulch two to three inches thick to everything you plant, you can harness the practical benefits of mulching. Whether it’s bark chips, straw, pea gravel, or even compost or leaves, the choice is yours. Relieve the burden of constant watering and weeding by using mulch. It holds in moisture, preventing water from evaporating away from your plants. This time-saving technique also helps suppress weed growth, giving you more time to enjoy your garden. |
| 9 Finally, ALWAYS keep on top of the weeds. The moment you see them, pluck them out. If you don’t, they will drain the nutrients from your crops and ultimately destroy all your time spent trying to save time. |
I would love to grow vegetables, but I can’t do the digging or kneeling any more…
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It does take it out of the body Jaye, l totally agree. Given that vegetables is great for our health, the production of them can work the opposite.
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Thank you for sharing this informative article, Rory.
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