About Growing Vegetables
- Most vegetables can be grown indoors in a container or outside in a yard. As long as they have the soil drainage, water and sun, they'll thrive.
- If you're growing vegetables outside, you'll need to find out what your USDA hardiness zone is. This is an index of the climate conditions where you live and will help you narrow down what will grow well in your garden.
- Growing the vegetables that you regularly buy at the store will allow you to cut your weekly grocery bill. Growing them from seed is even cheaper and can be well worth the time investment, even after you factor in the cost of garden tools.
- One downside of growing vegetables is having a harvest too big to eat yourself. Solve this problem by planting the same vegetables every two weeks so you can harvest them as you eat them.
- Each vegetable goes from seed to harvest at different rates. Also, some vegetables can be planted in cool weather, while others fare better in the warmth.
Where Vegetables Can Grow
What to Plant
Cost
Planting in Succession
Time Frame for Planting and Growth
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