The first thing to know is that if you are new to gardening, having a greenhouse is like having a lab in your backyard. You are going to experiment, add or take away minerals, have failed projects and be surprised at the resiliency of nature. Now, we do not want to appear as alarmists in any way but thought you might be interested in knowing how to grow in a greenhouse too so here it goes!
As you can guess, there are a few factors that will affect your yield including whether you heat the greenhouse or additional grow lights. Also, consider utilizing all areas of the greenhouse. Think about growing in pots under the bench, on the bench level, on the shelves, in hanging baskets and more! Maximizing the space will increase your yield.
Compare and contrast quick crops mixed with longer crops like tomatoes in a barely heated greenhouse: Micro-greens take a week or two, Topsi radishes grow in 30 days and heads of butter lettuce are edible in 60 days in a greenhouse. If you let them, tomatoes will take over the whole greenhouse and you will get 50 pounds easily as well as 60 pounds of cucumber and bushels of peppers. Can, jar and freeze them for the cold months! Once the tomatoes are pulled in the fall, move in the spinach starts and you'll have greens for salads even if the greenhouse is unheated after October.
Shoulder season varies with climate but with a little seasonal heat, you could get several crops over the eight warmest months of greenhouse growing. Here are some examples:
Deciding how to make the best use of your greenhouse is a combination of what crops are growing and whether you heat your greenhouse. Spinach, for instance, is planted after tomatoes are removed in the fall and without any extra heat, it sprouts by March and is edible before the tomatoes go back into the unheated or partially heated greenhouse in May. Kale, root vegetables, herbs and other lettuces can flourish in a cold climate as long as there is solar gain in the greenhouse.
So obviously, the first decision is whether you will heat your greenhouse to extend the seasons. If you heat it seasonally you can grow so much more. But the big decision is what do you want to grow?
There are lots of choices for faster-growing veggies and remember to rotate your crops too when the season changes.
For more great tips from Donna, visit www.donnabalzer.com.
You can also read Donna’s gardening books: No Guff Vegetable Gardening with Steven Biggs and her just released Gardener’s Gratitude Journal: Part Diary, Part Personal Growing Guide.