Success with Succession Sowing

by Tusha Yakovleva

There is always a moment in June when you think the garden is set. After weeks of transplanting, direct sowing, weeding, and waiting on the weather, the garden is finally filled with plants. Mid June brings a calm spell to the garden, after all available space is filled with sowings and transplants and all that is left to do is stay on top of the weeds. Anyone hoping to have homegrown food on the kitchen table all season long can’t linger in the calm spell for too long, but needs to consistently look forward at what to grow for the meals ahead. This is where succession comes in: for a continual harvest, sow continually.

erin planting (640x480) Trials Garden manager Erin Enouen sowing seeds.

First, choose the appropriate crops for succession. To determine what will work for second, third and more sowings, contemplate these three questions:

  1. How many weeks are left in the growing season? Most plants don't grow much after the first frost, even cold hearty ones.
  2. How many days does it take for the crop to mature? If planning for fall harvest, add an extra two weeks of time to make up for the shrinking days.
  3. Can it tolerate a frost? Can it tolerate heat?

Mache, spinach, and radishes for example, mature quickly, but don’t tolerate heat, so they are best planted early in the season, then again at the cool end (in fall). Tomatoes, peppers and eggplants, on the other hand, love the heat but take a months to mature, so they can only be planted once per season in our northern climate. Cucurbits takes a while to mature, but not so long that a gardener couldn’t squeeze in staggered plantings every few weeks for a continual showering of squashes, melons and cucumbers.

Next, choose the right succession schedule: Spotted TroutPlant, eat, plant, eat.

Some veggies are ready to be harvested quickly and can only be harvested once per planting; to ensure a steady supply, keep planting them throughout the season. Example: Scarlet Nantes carrots mature in 65 days. Sow a couple of weeks worth of carrots every few weeks for a steady supply. Great veggies for quick succession plantings are arugula, basil, cilantro, beets, dill, lettuce, radish, spinach, tatsoi and turnips. You can follow quick successions behind quick successions, making garden planning for these things easy. Other veggies can be left in the ground for a bit and  harvested more than once, but start to loose steam over time. These can be started at longer intervals between plantings. Try a fresh planting of kale, broccoli, bush beans, chard and collards for an abundance of these veggies in the late summer and into the fall. You can follow these longer interval successions behind things that come out of the garden early such as peas, onions, and garlic.

Plant, plant, plant, eat.

Different varieties of the same crop have different requirements and results – tomatoes, for example, take from 50 to 90 days to mature; summer squash loves heat, winter squash likes the cool of fall. Take advantage of the chaotic timing by planting everything! Choose three varieties – early, peak, and late season - to extend your harvest window to the max. Great veggies with different maturity dates: beans, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery/celeriac, eggplant, melon, peas, summer squash, tomatoes. Example, plant Early Jersey Wakefield, Red Express and Danish Ballhead Cabbages all at the same time, and harvest them as they mature all summer long. The Early Jersey and Red Express will mature about 60-70 days from transplant, where the Danish Ballhead takes a 100 days.

6 Succession Tips:

  • Rotate plants in season. After one crop has been harvested, use that bed for veggies from a plant different family. This will help lessen the chance of disease, deter pests, and help balance soil nutrients. For example, follow Asian greens with Swiss chard.
  • Sow or transplant a small amount of seeds/plants at one time at regular intervals to have a small but consistent harvest week to week. Instead of having an overwhelming amount of lettuce mature at once, for example, sow a few salads’ worth every week.
  • When planting late in the season, choose plants that can be enjoyed young, in case the weather suddenly turns: greens, carrots, beets, radishes are all delicious even before they reach maturity.
  • Switch varieties for switching weather. Keep your succession schedule, but change varieties to match the weather. For example, spinach loves cool temperatures, amaranth tastes similar and loves heat. Sow amaranth mid-summer, and bookend with spinach in the spring and fall.
  • Consider how two plants share a space and interplant complimentary varieties. For example, planting a row of radishes, or other short crops, along the bottom of a pea trellis or growing lettuce between slow-growing kale gives the first crop a chance to get big enough before the second crop fills in to give the first some shade.
  • Transplant and sow directly. Some varieties prefer to be directly sown in the garden (carrots, spinach, radishes, etc). Others, such as tomatoes, peppers, and eggplants, are best started indoors, then moved to the garden. And some, can go either way – seedling or seed. One simple succession trick is to plant those flexible crops from seed and transplants at the same time. Try this with summer and winter squash, parsley basil, dill, or lettuce.

For more specific varieties and planting dates, check out these previous posts:

Sow Now What: 20 seeds to sow in summer

Enjoying Summer, Planning for Fall (complete with seed starting schedule!)

Sow Now What: Seeds to sow for fall