Vegetables Crop Rotation
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When growing vegetables in the garden most people tend to
grow the same crops year after year.
This is not surprising really, as we grow the crops that we
prefer to eat and we also tend to grow the plants that we have the most success growing.
One thing that most gardeners seem to do is grow the
same vegetables in
the very same place in the garden each year.
You will tend to have a spot for your tomatoes and a spot for
your pumpkins and so on and the problem with planting the same crops in the same place each year is the effect it
has on the nutrients in the soil.
Plants will extract the nutrients that they need from the soil
for their specific requirements each season. By planting the same crops in the same places you will end up
with nutrient deficiencies.
This is where crop rotation can and will enhance the value of
your soil. By rotating where you plant your vegetables each season you will be giving the soil the opportunity to
produce better results as there won't be the same demands for the same nutrients in the soil when there is a
different plant growing their from last season.
To improve the soil quality even more, you should dig in the
remains of the crops once the season has finished allowing some of those nutrients to be put back into the
soil.
In the off-season you can also grow cover crops in the garden.
These are crops that are grown specifically to add nitrogen to
the soil. These crops have high nitrogen value in their roots and when they are ready, you dig them into the
soil.
In doing this you can expect a better harvest each year as the
new planting of vegetables will have more nutrients to feed them.
Editor in Chief
Peter Charalambos
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