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What if I told you it’s possible to grow more food in less space with half the effort? As a busy mom of four and a business owner, I wouldn’t have been able to make gardening work for me without this planting method. So it’s safe to say that the Gardenary planting method completely changed my life.

You may be surprised by where I learned this planting method originally. (Spoiler: It didn’t come from a gardening book.)

In this video, I’m going to outline my tried and true, game-changing planting method so you can implement it in your garden, too. Don’t worry—there aren’t any charts or lists of information you need to memorize about each plant. Actually, most of the things that stress you out about gardening (e.g., pests, disease, chores) are no longer an issue when you plant this way.

If this sounds like something you’re down to try, this video is for you!

In this video:
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31 Comments

  1. We live on the south east coast of England, in the seventies I used to watch Geoff Hamilton on tv, he was a fantastic gardener. This was the method he used in his Ornamental Kitchen Garden series, I still have his books. He grew flowers amongst the veg in beds with loads of different things in them. This method worked then and it’s worked ever since, and it all looks very pretty, not just like utilitarian veg beds.

  2. While this is not an original planting method, it's always good to be reminded of the different roads to success in gardening. Some exceptions to this particular style will always be the case, ie sweet potatoes (leaves and roots), sunflowers (fruit and leaves, some people even eat the heads), etc. The old companion planting concept is nicely reinforced in her personal gardening discovery, and it's good to see her "new" insights so beautifully presented. Her book would be a valuable addition to any new gardener's library, I'm sure. Thank you, Gardenary.

  3. thank you I do have the roots and leaves and fruit book. It is so pretty will be doing this next spring. I have metal horse troughs on wheels that my dad helped me set up. Hmm so excited.

  4. Why the hell is all the introduction required? Can't you just tell us your bloody method?

  5. If you can figure out how I can eat fresh from my garden 365 days a year in northwest Minnesota zone 3, without building a heated greenhouse over my garden, you are the best gardener I have ever come across.
    Hard to harvest with at least two feet of snow and more and as low as -40+ degrees.

    I am just having fun.
    With that said it has been in the low to mid twenties with an inch of snow on the ground and I have a few young cauliflower plants hanging on but that will end once the ground finally freezes.

    I can get plants in the brassica family and different greens through the winter with enough cover for the winter but then they are only growing for seed production at that point as they quickly put up a seed stock.

    Great video.
    Intercropping like this makes for very healthy soil as the different plants help each other grow as they feed each other through the root system.

  6. I am bedridden a lot, but also love to garden. I can’t stay on top of things like the garden demands. I was beginning to think I’d have to quit, but my Dr loves that I garden because it is the best exorcise I get. I will garden when I don’t feel the best, because I know I can’t afford to let the beds dry out or the weeds take over. I won’t do that for workouts😂! I’m going to try your method this coming Spring. I will let you know how it goes. I am encouraged, thank you 😊!

  7. I live in zone 9b and my garden has been a failure 3 years in a row. Thank God I found you ! I am so excited again to have a thriving garden! Thank you !!!❤

  8. I pretty much use intensive gardening. I also grow 30+, 5 gallon buckets of veggies some of which trail up lattice. This is along with raised garden beds. I am very happy with the results. Right now, I have 24 buckets with at least 2 plants each as well as lettuce, spinach, kale and such. Greats way to garden. I truly enjoy your videos.

  9. You discovered permaculture guilds:)!
    If you haven’t checked out permaculture(which you well may have), you might really like to look into it:).
    I’m excited about incorporating trees into the guilds which is just another layer of food!

  10. Love it, great information. I have a small space so i do something similar. I plant Tomatoes with herbs around it. My mistake is planting all Kale together and then Aphids usually get them in the fall. I plant more and more every year so i am looking forward to spring so i can go all in with this method.

  11. The directions on seed packets/commercial starts are only relevant to an industrial farming model, where use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides is expected, and spacing is based on use of a large tractor… So, it’s really no surprise that it fails when we try to follow those directions outside those contexts.

  12. Are you saying I can just throw everything about "companion planting" out the window?? That would be easier on my brain for sure. I have a 10ft by 8ft area, sectioned into 4 areas. I so know that I am not putting enough food in there. I also have about 32 concrete double blocks around the perimeter. I figured herbs and flowers could go in them. Well, 2 rosemary, 2 different flowers are doing moderately well, and curly parsley is barely hanging on. Everything else laughed at me. This season I'm hoping for better results. I appreciate your insight.

  13. How do you grow successful gardens with limited sunlight during the warmer months because most of your yard is covered by trees?

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