How to Plan a Garden When You Hate Graph Paper (2024)

I spent 12 years working as an Extension Educator,extolling the virtues of garden planning. Any lecture on any gardening topic pretty much started with some form of step 1: Make a plan.

Little did most people know, I’ve hardly ever made a formal garden plan.

Turns out the reality is I am a terrible garden planner, at least in a traditional sense.The only graph paper Iown is a partially used pad from college.

So if you feel like you’re less of a gardener because making a scale drawingof your garden is not your idea of a good time, rest assured you’re not alone.

But don’t get me wrong. I plan. Obsessively sometimes. But I have a hard time putting my ideas on paper.

This tendency was the source of some huge arguments between me and my husband when we moved into our new house twelve years ago, complete with absolutely no landscaping. Give him a box of colored pencils and graph paper and he will lay out the garden of your dreams in an afternoon; I will have some beautiful ideas in mind too, but I’m much more content to allow inspiration at the garden center to bring those ideas to life. “Why can’t you just make a plan and stick to it?” my husband would argue with me, “Why is this so hard?”

I don’t know. It probably has something to do with the fact that I may have one plant in mind, but then I go to the garden center and find a dozen more that I hadn’t thought of that might work better. And of course there’s always the plants that are too beautiful to pass up, that you know you have room for somewhere…

As we bickered andplanted gardens at our house, I started thinking maybe I was a fraud. Here I am teaching people the importance of planning out their garden, but I’m not doing it myself. Then the topic came up among a group of colleagues at a work gathering. I was so relieved to hear person after person admit to standing in their yard with a plant in one hand and shovel in the other, looking for the perfect spot. It wasn’t just me!

I used this revelationas proof to my husband that my lack of a paper plan wasperfectly fine; I proceeded to plant. And plant. And plant.

But then the plants grew. And grew. And grew.

A good chunk of my garden beds needed very regular attention in order to not look likewild mess. Once my son entered the world, those regularly occurring gardening sessions went out the window. I was lucky to get a few minutes here and there and the luxury of an hour or two if naptime was successful.

How to Plan a Garden When You Hate Graph Paper (1)

Knock-out rose ‘Rainbow’ in front of our house.

I noticed something interesting around this time. Back when we were planting new garden beds around our house, asa compromise during one of our bickering sessionsI drew up a plan, on actual paper, for the bed in front of our house. I even measured out the space with a tape measure. Surprisingly, that bed looked relatively decent despite spotty post-motherhood care.

That was when I knew I needed a plan for my other gardens. Despite the fact that I will never ever be excited about graph paper.

Did I buckle down with a tape measure and graph paper and map out my gardens? Uh…. no. It’s just not me. I did make a few lists of what I had, what still looked good. I relocated a few plants. And *gasp* I even tilled under one section of garden after I decided it just so overgrown and out-of-hand I just needed to start over.

What am I doing differently moving forward?

  • Using a tape measure in more than just the vegetable garden– as much as I resisted using a tape measure in our ornamental beds, I had always used one in the vegetable garden. No doubt this is a remnant of working in cornfields a good chunk of college and all of grad school. I am a terrible estimator of space; I always think I have more space than there is. But if I have the dimensions of an area, that does keep me from having eyes bigger than my garden while shopping.
  • Payingcloser attention to mature sizes of plants, and allowing space for that size when planting– Plants given room to grow to their mature size without crowding are healthier and don’t need as much fussy maintenance like constant pruning to fit limited space. I firmly believe this is the one big reasonmy plantings in front ofour house looked halfway decent despite near total neglect when we were new parents.
  • One of the big mistakes I made when I started our gardens was I planted WAY too many plants. The “blank canvas” of an empty yard that everyone said they envied was a huge source of anxiety and overwhelm to me. It was all too easy to fill the empty space, but plants have a way of doing this thing called growing….

    How to Plan a Garden When You Hate Graph Paper (2)

    Spiderwort (Tradescantia sp.) that appeared in with some hostas. I suspect it is a seedling from the cultivar ‘Sweet Kate’ that I have elsewhere in the garden. This seedling did not retain the lime-green leaves that attracted me to ‘Sweet Kate’ but the bluish flowers will work well in my Illini garden (orange and blue).

  • I’m trying to use what I already have before buying more plants. Before I head to the garden center, I’m looking at my garden beds to see if there are any crowded plants that would work elsewhere in our landscape.
  • I thought I could take pictures of my garden beds along to the garden center so I’d be more realistic about how many plants I needed. That backfired on me. I am a very visual person, but the pictures I had snapped right before going shopping didn’t tell the whole story.I got to thegarden center and was overwhelmed with the selection and unsureabout which plants had survived winter and which had notback home. Afterdoingsome springclean up, I have a much betterhandle on what each bed needs (plus an actual list!)
  • I am way more reluctant to accept plants from friends and neighbors, and I am super picky on what I consider at community plant sales where folks sell divisions from their own gardens. Some of my most invasive, awful, pain-in-the-rear plants came from well meaning people wanting to share their plants. Keep this in mind as you shop these sales for your own garden. If there is an entire eight foot table filled with the same plant, keep walking. There is a reason there are so many orange daylilies and purple iris for sale; they grow like mad! You may have a spot where you need these vigorous growers, but take heed if you don’t!

I’ll never ever be a gardener that plans every square inch of the garden out on paper.But rather than shame myself for it like I’ve done in the past, I’m working on accepting what works for me. I’m not the fraud I thought I was. I do plan my garden– in my own way. I’ve made plenty of mistakes in my garden, but I’m recognizing them and correcting them. I’ve been declutteringandsimplifyingthe inside of my house, and in a lot of ways I’m doing the same thing outsidein my garden this growing season.

Someone commented to me after we were in our house a year or two, “Oh so you’re landscaping must be finished by now.” They looked at me funny when I responded “a garden is never finished.” A gardener is always experimenting, always finding new plants, new ideas to try.We all evolve as gardeners, learning new lessons with every passing year. What kind of plans do you have for your garden this year?

If you liked this post, please subscribe to Grounded and Growing today and receive your copy of “15 Tips to Become a '15 Minute Gardener'” so you can spend less time working ON your garden and more time enjoying being IN your garden.! It’s absolutely free. When you join the Grounded and Growing community, you’ll finally take the garden off your “To-Do” list and allow yourself time to enjoy your garden and savor the peace and serenity there.I tell subscribers about new posts as soon as I hit ‘publish’ and send weekly-ish updates on what’s going on in my garden– good, bad AND ugly.

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How to Plan a Garden When You Hate Graph Paper (2024)

FAQs

How to Plan a Garden When You Hate Graph Paper? ›

Basically, I use an Excel spreadsheet like it is graph paper and just draw out my plan to scale. Start by making a grid in your Excel worksheet. I change the column width and row heights to look like grid paper.

What is the best way to layout a garden? ›

As a general rule, put tall veggies toward the back of the bed, mid-sized ones in the middle, and smaller plants in the front or as a border. Consider adding pollinator plants to attract beneficial insects that can not only help you get a better harvest, but will also prey on garden pests.

How to plan a garden on paper? ›

Draw up a simple plot plan with your garden's measurements in all directions. Remember, no law requires a garden to be square or rectangular. Your garden can be round, curved, or any shape that fits your landscape. Sketch circles for individual transplants, and rows for directly sown seeds.

What is the most basic garden layout? ›

Traditional In-Ground Row Garden Layout

In general, a vegetable garden design runs from south to north, to make the most of sun exposure and air circulation. This very basic vegetable garden design is meant to make cultivation easier, as well as for convenience when weeding and harvesting.

How do you layout a garden for beginners? ›

Additionally, arrange the plants in such a way that the tallest ones are at the north end of the row, followed by medium-height veggies, and finally, the shortest ones at the south end. This arrangement maximizes sunlight exposure for all the plants.

How do you make a garden grid? ›

A popular method involves placing stakes or screws at one foot intervals around your bed and using tomato twine to act as the visual divider. This method is especially useful if you plan on removing the grid later on in the growing season.

Is there a free landscape design app? ›

SmartDraw is a user-friendly, downloadable software design that allows you to design the patio, pavers, garden, and outdoor spaces in general.

What is the basic pattern in garden design? ›

Grid lines drawn at 45 degrees can be used as a guideline to design the garden. Rectangular themes are the most popular and widely used. They are adapted to give a formal look to the garden. Long or narrow gardens can be easily divided into even sections using this particular theme.

How to plot out a flower garden? ›

Consider creating a rough sketch to visualize the layout. Experiment with different configurations, taking into account plant heights, the mature size of the plant, color combinations, and any focal points you want to incorporate. A well-designed layout will ensure that your garden looks balanced and harmonious.

How do I arrange perennials in my garden? ›

In a one-sided planting bed, stair-step plant heights—tall plants in back, short ones in front. If your perennial garden design is a free-standing bed that will be viewed from all sides, put the tallest plants in the middle of the design and stair-step heights to bed edges.

How do you make a flower garden plot? ›

Just loosen the soil by digging or tilling 6 to 8 inches deep with a garden fork. Turn your amendments and organic matter into loosened soil so everything is mixed together. For annual containers, such as window boxes or flowerpots, remove the old soil and throw any non-diseased material in the compost pile.

What vegetables should not be planted next to each other? ›

14 Vegetables You Should Never Plant Together—Gardening Experts Explain Why
  • 01 of 14. Beans and Onions. ...
  • 02 of 14. Tomatoes and Potatoes. ...
  • 03 of 14. Corn and Tomatoes. ...
  • 04 of 14. Tomatoes and Brassicas. ...
  • 05 of 14. Cucumber and Squash. ...
  • 06 of 14. Lettuce and Celery. ...
  • 07 of 14. Fennel and Tomatoes. ...
  • 08 of 14. Peppers and Cabbage.
Jan 16, 2024

Which vegetables should be planted together? ›

Companion Planting Chart
Type of VegetableFriends
CabbageBeets, celery, chard, lettuce, spinach, onions
CarrotsBeans, lettuce, onions, peas, peppers, tomatoes
CornClimbing beans, cucumber, marjoram, peas, pumpkins, squash, sunflowers, zucchini
OnionsCabbage, carrots, chard, lettuce, peppers, tomatoes
12 more rows

What is the best direction for garden rows? ›

The north-south orientation allows the sun to penetrate the garden by shining down the rows. This is especially helpful during the winter gardening period when the sun stays relatively low in the sky.

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