Read requirements as a system
Plant labels often compress a growing season into a few phrases. Full sun, rich soil and regular water are useful signals, but they do not describe how needs change between germination, vegetative growth, flowering and harvest. Our plant references connect these stages so that temperature, light, root space, water and nutrition can be considered together.
Variety matters. Two cultivars of the same crop may differ in mature size, disease resistance, day-length response, cold tolerance and time to harvest. Use a guide to understand the species, then check the seed supplier or nursery description for the specific variety. Local extension services and experienced regional growers can help interpret broad advice for a particular climate.
Choose crops for the limiting factor
When space is limited, compare yield, harvest window and how often your household uses the crop. When light is limited, leafy vegetables and some herbs are usually more realistic than large fruiting plants. Where water is scarce, establishment needs, mature drought tolerance and the ability to mulch or irrigate should influence the choice.
A crop can be biologically possible without being a sensible fit. Long-season plants occupy valuable space; vigorous vines need support; perennial fruit may take years to establish. The right choice reflects the site and the grower's priorities, including taste, storage, cost, learning value and enjoyment.
Use observations to refine the guide
Record sowing and transplant dates, the variety, approximate conditions and the first meaningful harvest. Note pest or disease symptoms with photographs before taking action. Over several cycles, this creates a local reference that can improve spacing, timing and variety choice more reliably than memory alone.
Vegetable reference library
Fruiting crop
Growing tomatoes
Plan light, root space, watering, feeding and training, then diagnose common fruit and foliage problems from observable symptoms.
Open the tomato referenceTuber crop
Growing potatoes
Compare early and maincrop potatoes, then plan planting, earthing up, water, harvest and dark storage.
Open the potato referenceRoot crop
Growing carrots
Prepare the root zone, sow and thin accurately, protect against carrot fly and prevent misshapen or split roots.
Open the carrot referenceClimbing crop
Growing cucumbers
Choose greenhouse or outdoor varieties, provide warmth and support, and manage moisture, flowers and harvest.
Open the cucumber referenceFruiting crop
Growing sweet peppers
Raise plants with enough heat and light, maintain steady roots and take fruit from green through full colour.
Open the pepper referenceBulb crop
Growing onions
Match day length, sets or seed to the site, then manage shallow roots before curing sound bulbs for storage.
Open the onion referenceBulb crop
Growing garlic
Choose hardneck or softneck stock, time cold exposure, manage scapes and judge harvest by leaf condition.
Open the garlic referenceLeaf crop
Growing lettuce
Use succession sowing, seasonal cultivars and steady moisture to produce clean leaves before plants bolt.
Open the lettuce referencePod crop
Growing green beans
Compare bush and climbing beans, wait for warm soil, support vines and pick tender pods repeatedly.
Open the green bean referencePod crop
Growing peas
Choose shelling, snow or sugar snap peas, then coordinate cool-season sowing, support and prompt harvest.
Open the pea referenceSummer squash
Growing zucchini and courgettes
Give each plant warm soil, generous space and reliable water, then manage pollination and frequent harvest.
Open the zucchini referenceTurn crop requirements into a plan
Compare the limiting requirements across the crops you want to grow. The planning section explains how to turn individual references into one workable calendar.