
I know there’s snow in most places but spring will be here before you know it. And if you wait until spring is here to start planning your spring garden, you’re not going to enjoy spring very much. I know, I’ve been there.
Without some preparation you will spend more money and harvest fewer vegetables than if you spend an afternoon now to plan your vegetable garden.
I try to grow enough of each item to last our family for a year. We eat some fresh and we preserve some. I have some planning worksheets that I use that are great help to know how many plants of each variety I need to grow. You can get these worked emailed to you by filling out the form below.
1. Think about what your growing year looks like and embrace it. This is really important even though it’s not really fun. We all want to think that we can plant seeds or transplants in March or April and harvest vegetables until September or October. But that’s just not reality for most of us.
For instance, I live in Zone 9 along the Texas Gulf Coast which means I can start planting our spring garden in late February and early March. I know that sounds early but we still only have about 4 months of growing. By the time late July gets here, it will be too hot to grow anything but peppers and okra. Which means, if I want to get the most out of those 4 growing months I need make sure I plant early in the planting season not later in the season.
2. Decide what you really want to plant. This is a great time to talk with your family about what fruits and veggies they like and would want to grow. Don’t plant things no one in your family likes, it will only lead to frustration. Dream a little and make a list.
Maybe you won’t be able to plant EVERYTHING but you’ll get more planted with a list than without one. And it will help you stay on track when you see all those, oh so tempting, seed packets and fruit trees at the store. I like to keep notes on what we liked and what we didn’t in my gardening notebook.

3. Order seed catalogs and seeds. If you’re going to grow your plants from seeds, you need seeds. One of my favorite places to get seeds is MiGardener. All of their seeds are heirloom seeds and most are just $2 a packet. If you use my link you’ll also get a 10% discount on your entire order.
If you’re going to get your seeds from your local stores, be sure to take your list with you. Those seed packets can be pretty enticing. Here are some tips for deciphering all the information on the seed packets. How to read a seed packet.
4. Figure out when you need to plant each plant. If all you do is spend one weekend putting in seeds and transplants, you’ll never have the garden you want. You need to plant when it’s good for the plants not just when it’s convenient for you.
Garden.org has a great app and all you need to do is put in your city and state and it will generate a planting strategy for you. This is a great starting place you can tweak it each year based on what you’ve learned about your own growing climate. If need help understanding your growing climate I have a short ecourse to help you out.

5. Decide if you are going to sow seeds or plant transplants. There’s not a right or wrong decision but you need to decide. If you’re going to use seeds you need to decide if you need to start them early inside or if you can just sow them directly in the ground. This will depend on the plant but it also depends on how long your growing season is.
6. If you don’t already have a garden spot, pick one. For most vegetables you need will need a spot that gets full sun – which is at least 6 hours of direct sun light.

7. If you don’t have frozen ground you can start preparing your garden beds. Maybe you didn’t do such a good job of cleaning them out after last summer’s garden, now is a good time. Or maybe you want to make raised beds, now is the time you can do that, too. If you start now, or as soon as the ground thaws out, you won’t have to rush when it’s time to plant.
Let me say this too, the most important aspect of your garden is the soil. You need good soil. .
If you have very limited funds spend it on building healthy soil and buy seeds instead of plants.

8. If you don’t have a compost bin, you should start one. You can start getting leaves from your neighbors and used coffee grounds from Starbucks and you’ll have free compost before you know it.
9. {BONUS} Figure out how much of each plant you need plant to feed your family. If you need help I have some free printable planning sheets. You can get those here.
What are you doing to get ready for the spring gardening season?

Pinning this! Great list 🙂
Amber – http://www.herbalacademyofne.com
Thanks, Amber
Great post, shared it with my facebook readers. We are doing some planing here too. It is so fun to plan a all new garden.
It is so fun!
Lovely list! I Pinned 🙂
Thanks, Linsey
Consider yourself pinned! Great advice. We live in the same zone, although different parts of the country. Happy gardening!
Thanks, Daisy. I love your blog. You’re the first person I’ve known to have actually had a pineapple produce.
Good list! We’re expecting 12 inches of snow today. I cannot wait for spring to come!
No snow today–just bitterly cold. I’ve been gearing up for Runamuk’s market CSA–planning the layout of 3 new gardens, determining sowing, transpating, and harvesting dates, and estimating yields in order to figure out how many subscribers we can support. Great post!
Great Tips – I found you on The Backyard Farming Hop today. I like to do direct composting year round because the worms love it. Great way to bring them to the surface and working that soil while I’m inside staying warm in the winter months. -Carole @ GardenUp green
Good afternoon! This is a wonderful list, most helpful. Thank you for it. I tried the link to your gardening notebook and I received an error message. Just thought I’d let you know. God bless.
M.
Thank you so much for letting me know! I moved to wordpress last week and I’m still sorting it all out. Here’s a link directly to the information page, http://creativesimpleliving.com/the-gardening-notebook-2/.
What a great list and the perfect time of year to be thinking about your spring garden. Thank you for sharing on the HomeAcre Hop, hope to see you again tomorrow! – Nancy
The Home Acre Hop
Thanks, Nancy. We’re getting a little spring fever around here. 🙂
Thanks for sharing at Green Thumb Thursday and we hope you come back this week! This is a great list of things to think and plan for – many a garden has failed because we just don’t want to plan it out!
You’re so right. Planning really is important for most things in life…including gardening.
I found this on Pinterest and I’m definitely re-pinning. If you’re interested in sharing this on another hop, I run a homesteading hop on Fridays. I’d love to have you!
I’d be glad to share, Jessica. Thanks so much for the invite. I shared your Winter Sowing post on facebook the other day. It’s a wonderful post.
Perfect timing for this! Winter has me cooped up and ready to start planning to get my hands in the dirt.
Love the pictures of the tomatoes, Angi! I have decided that trying to keep plants alive in the hot desert of Phoenix during the summer is near impossible when the plants are in pots on my balcony. It is a good list to think about planning ahead and looking at the best growing season for each plant.
PERFECT! I am doing some of this already, but other tips I needed reminded of. Thanks for the awesome advice; I’ll be pinning it for reference and sharing on Facebook!
Thanks for the great tips. I went through and brainstormed ideas for what I want to plant and then figured out my zone, frost dates and when I need to start plants indoors. I feel much better prepared now.
It’s so wonderful to get everything out of your head and onto paper, isn’t it? Here’s to a great gardening season!
Great article! Especially the link to MiGardener Seeds. They are new to me and I made an order.
You’re so welcome! I have been really pleased with them.
I looked into Garden.org for my location. I hópe NEW gardeners don’t go by their planting guides. We plant over 1000 garlic starts here in SW MI in OCTOBER. THEY SAY TO PLANT IN AUGUST. No way we put out Tomato in EARLY May!
Thanks for the head’s up. It’s pretty accurate for our area, but it’s always best to double check online calendars with local gardeners.