Square-Foot Grid Garden
Here's
an easy, orderly garden design that kids really like:
www.squarefootgardening.com
You
just build a box as with any other raised bed (see #13 in Garden Planning,
"Building a Raised Bed"). Then fill it with compost, and place a grid that
you've made out of wood or recycled Venetian blinds screwed together, or even
clothesline cord stretched between eyehooks. The grid sections are all 12" x
12" - one square foot each.
The
grid guides you into planting the right quantity for an easy-to-care-for garden
that gives everybody a chance to garden. A square-foot garden is a great choice
for a school garden so that every student who wants to garden can be
responsible for his or her square.
Because
children's arms aren't too long, you should create raised beds that are no
wider than four feet, with access from both sides. If you use 2" x 12' lumber,
then you will have 48 square feet per bed.
Keep
about three feet between beds for the "aisles." The students will stand or
kneel in the aisles while working on their plants. You can put down 3 or 4
layers of newspaper, wet it, and put down clean straw for the aisle walkways,
or use bark mulch.
The
nice thing about this garden plan is that the gardeners never tromp on the
garden itself. That way, the soil doesn't become compacted, or pushed down. The
fluffier the soil stays, the easier it is for the roots of the plants to grow.
You
can group the plants in different beds or spread them out by grade level. Each
child's name with the plant name could be written with a Sharpie pen on a large
wooden craft stick.
Follow
directions on the seed packet for how many inches apart the mature plant will
eventually need, if you're sowing seeds right onto the soil. That way, you
won't overcrowd your square foot. You may plant only one cabbage in a square
foot, for example, but you might plant four rows of four baby carrot seeds to
wind up with 16 small plants in another square foot.
That
means each student may plant just one seed or seedling for a plant that ends up
being larger . . . or four (two rows of two) for medium-size plants, nine
(three rows of three) for smaller plants, or 16 (four rows of four) for the
smallest plants.
Some
popular garden plants, such as bush tomatoes, take up so much space that they
would need 9 square feet. If you wish, you could put in a pole support and grow
a vining tomato instead, which needs only two or three square feet.
If
a student chooses to grow strawberries, put just four plants in a square foot,
and use scissors to cut off all runners once a week, or else you will have tons
of foliage and hardly any fruit.