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Seattle Urban Farm Company - Garden trellises and supplies

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206.816.9740
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Seattle Urban Farm Company - Garden trellises and supplies

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Episode 67: Garden Site Selection

October 27, 2017 hilary dahl
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It’s the time of year when we start shifting our focus from what’s actually growing in our gardens to what we’re dreaming of growing next year. For some of us, that means expanding or redesigning garden in some way. For others, it might mean taking the leap from growing vegetables in a few small containers to dedicating a large part of your yard to food production. Whether you’re expanding your garden to accommodate more crops or starting from scratch and building a brand new garden, there a few key factors to keep in mind when choosing a site that will help you make the most of the space you dedicate to your garden.


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SHOW NOTES:

In this episode, we discuss the factors to consider when choosing a site for an edible garden:

  • Sunlight

  • Accessibility

  • Water

  • Soil quality

  • Fencing

Important Take-aways:

  • When you’re looking for a site, keep in mind that it is essential that your garden receive a minimum of six hours of sunlight each day at the height of the growing season.

  • Ideally, vegetable garden beds aren’t just accessible, but also visible from your house. Garden maintenance will be much easier if you happen to walk by your garden on a daily basis.

  • Not only do you want to be able to set up a simple, manageable and effective irrigation system for your garden, but you’ll also want to be able to reach the garden by hose for direct sowing, watering transplants, and other uses.

  • When choosing a site for your garden, it’s unlikely that you’ll find a location on your property with soil that is ready for planting, and this can easily be fixed with an application of a few inches (or feet if filling a raised bed) of organic vegetable garden soil and compost.

  • Soils around homes that may have been painted with lead paint, homes near heavy industrial sites, or raised beds built with treated wood manufactured before 2004 could all contain contaminated soils. If you’re worried that the soil on your property may be contaminated, have it tested.

  • If you live in an environment where rabbits or deer are possible garden pests, install fencing to keep them from raiding your edible garden.


Both of our gardening books discuss this topic in more detail and provide instructional photos and graphics that support many of the ideas we introduced in this episode: 

High-Yield Vegetable Gardening

Click on the images to purchase on Amazon, or buy straight from us here! Our books can also be found at Barnes and Nobel, Target, West Coast Seeds, as well as many other booksellers and local nurseries. 


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Featured
Hilary Dahl
Hilary Dahl

Hilary Dahl is a co-owner of Seattle Urban Farm Company and host of the Encyclopedia Botanica podcast. Since 2010 Hilary Dahl has been helping beginning and experienced growers create beautiful and productive gardens. She has the unique experience of working in on a wide range of projects, from small backyard garden plots to multi-acre vegetable farms. She also works in her own garden every day after work. Hilary is also the creator of our podcast, the Encyclopedia Botanica, which she started as a way to share effective and efficient garden management techniques, and as a way to spread her love of growing food and flowers!

Colin McCrate
Colin McCrate

Colin McCrate has been growing food organically for over 25 years. He worked on a variety of small farms in the Midwest before moving to the west coast in 2003 to teach garden-based environmental education. He founded the Seattle Urban Farm Company in 2007 with the goal of applying years of horticultural and agricultural expertise to help aspiring growers get projects off the ground or more accurately; in the ground.

Since starting Seattle Urban Farm Co in 2007, he has helped guide hundreds of urban farmers through the design, construction and management of their own edible landscape. Colin is the author of three books; Food Grown Right, In Your Backyard(Mountaineers Books, 2012) and Grow More Food (Storey Publishing, 2022); and is a garden writer for the Seattle Times.

In Podcast, Garden Design Tags Encyclopedia Botanica, Podcast, garden design, vegetable garden design, vegetable gardening, edible gardening, organic garden, kitchen garden
← Episode 68: Smart Garden Body MechanicsEpisode 66: Raspberries with Lisa Devetter →
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seattle urban farm company
Address: 4511 Shilshole Ave NW, Seattle, WA 98107
farmers@SeattleUrbanFarmCo.com
206.816.9740

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