10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (2024)

Today I’m going to share with you 10 tips to grow more food from your edible home garden. These tips are so easy and you can implement them today to boost your garden’s production. No matter whether you are renting or living in an apartment.

It is no secret that we are facing a very real food security and shortage with many supermarket shelves completely empty. There has never been a better time to start growing your own food or ramp up your home gardens production. These tips will help you maximize the amount of fresh homegrown food you can produce from home. Starting NOW!

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (1)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (2)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (3)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (4)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (5)

WATCH 10 tips to Produce more Food

10 tips to Produce more Food at Home

1. Trim your Herbs

Especially if they are starting to flower. Herbs such as Basil, Mint, and Thyme can all be grown in pots, and trimming the tops will promote a bigger bushier plant. When plants get hot, stressed, or are just left to just grow, they will send off flowers to produce seeds for another generation. Trimming off these seeds will let your herbs know that it’s not time yet, and to keep producing. Just chuck the tops and seeds back in the garden and they will sprout new plants, dry or preserve your herbs, or pop the purple stems in vinegar and make a vibrant basil infusion! You can then use this to make salad dressings by mixing with a little olive oil and lemon juice.

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (6)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (7)

2. Regularly Plant “quick-to-grow” Crops

Quick-growing crops are great to continuously interplant in your garden to get quick wins. Edible plants such as Radish and Rocket are super quick to germinate and grow. Plant radish in the gaps of your garden for quick and easy food production. Radish is ready from seed to table in just 28 days and is one of the quickest things you can grow! Radish not only provides fresh crunchy vegetables to add to salads but you can also eat the leafy tops by making pesto or chimichurri. If you are not a fan of the spicey radish, then try them with your roast veggies! So sweet and delicious!

3. Succession Planting

A little planning goes a long way in an edible home garden. If you know your veggies will be finishing up soon, plant new seeds to have seedlings ready to go. You can plant your new seedling out before you have pulled out the old ones so that you can transition straight away and prevent empty spaces from going to waste without producing food. I also like to grow different varieties so I plant each type two weeks apart to help stagger the crops.

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (10)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (11)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (12)

4. Hand Pollinate

In an ideal world we will have lots of bees and pollinators in our home gardens to do the work for us. This isn’t always the case, especially if you live in an apartment or your gardens are new. Hand-pollinating can help ensure more of your fruit and veggies are pollinated and set to form full-sized fruit. We definitely want to encourage bees and pollinators by planting flowers but hand-pollinating can be an added insurance. This works best on plants such as Melon, Squash, Zucchini, and Pumpkin. Click here for more info on how to hand pollinate.

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (13)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (14)

5. Feed your Plants

Whether you make homemade compost teas, worm wee, fresh compost, dried Banana Peel, compost manure, or use organic liquid seaweed. Regularly feeding your plants 1-2 times per month can accelerate the growth and boost the health of your soil.

6. Harvest Crops Regularly

Your plant’s main goal is actually not to make delicious food to feed us humans… but to produce seeds to secure its future generation. If the plant feels it has enough fruit or vegetables produced with seeds it will slow or stop producing. Regularly picking your harvest when it is just ready will make the plant think that it has lost its seeds to predators so it will continue to produce more and more. So try not to leave things too long on the plant once they look ready. This also reduces the risk of other critters nabbing your produce first too.

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (20)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (21)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (22)

7. Learn more about Root to Shoot

Conventionally 30-50%, maybe even more of the edible plants are discarded. Crops such as Beetroot leaves, Carrot tops, Brassica leaves and stems, Sweet Potato leaves, male Pumpkin or Zucchini flowers, and so much more! Learn what parts of the plant are edible and you could double the amount of food you have in your garden in a matter of hours!! I have some recipes on my blog but this is something we dive deeper into inside my membership.

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (23)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (24)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (25)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (26)

8. Plant Perennials

Perennials are plants that last longer than 2 years. These may be a little slower to establish but once they do, they produce an abundance of food with just a little maintenance. These are plants such as Berries, Fruit trees, Artichoke, Asparagus, perennial Spinach varieties, Rhubarb and so much more! Having perennials in your garden will help you maintain your food supply. I also have an article on A-Z edible perennials available inside my membership.

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (27)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (28)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (29)

9. Stack in Time and Space

Use the space you have in your edible home garden to grow both horizontally and vertically. This can maximize the amount of food you can grow. Having a trellis at the back of your garden or container can help create structure and expand your food production capabilities. I also let plants use my fruit trees to grow up. Whether that’s beans, tomatoes, melons, or pumpkins. Growing vertically can double the amount of food you can grow in a single space. Stacking in time is just like succession planting. Plant crops that will be starting to take off as the previous ones are finishing up. If you have a vertical crop that may produce more shade on the lower levels this can also provide a cooler climate to grow some more sun-sensitive crops such as lettuce. Especially in these hot summers.

10. Utilise Space with Container Gardens

Even if you have a large veggie patch, container gardens still have plenty of use. Container gardens are great for growing prolific plants that can be a little invasive. These are plants such as Mint, Nasturtium, and Sunchokes. Not only will you get lots of food but your precious garden space won’t be overrun with the weed-like growth of these plants. Containers are also good for maximizing the sun and shade. You can move them around during the year to follow the sun or reduce the amount of direct sunlight in summer.

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (30)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (31)
10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (32)

Start TODAY with these 10 tips to produce more food from your edible home garden! Let me know if any of these tips sparked inspiration with you in the comments below.

Related Posts

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly (2024)

FAQs

10 tips to Produce more Food from your Edible Home Garden - Sustainable Holly? ›

If you do have some outdoor space, such as a rooftop, side yard or small balcony, establish your plants in a raised bed or large containers. Then, maximize the vertical space with a trellis system for plants that vine, such as tomatoes, melons, squash, cucumbers, beans, peas, etc.

What do you do to make your garden produce more food? ›

To get the most out of your garden, it's important to:
  1. Grow for a purpose. Take the time to consider the goals of your project. ...
  2. Select the best site and use it efficiently. Think ahead and place annual and perennial crops in appropriate locations. ...
  3. Plan well and keep good records. ...
  4. Maintain fertile soil. ...
  5. Know your plants.

How can we grow sustainable food at home? ›

If you do have some outdoor space, such as a rooftop, side yard or small balcony, establish your plants in a raised bed or large containers. Then, maximize the vertical space with a trellis system for plants that vine, such as tomatoes, melons, squash, cucumbers, beans, peas, etc.

What are the sustainable edible plants? ›

Leaves: Lettuce, Swiss chard, and kale are plants whose main edible parts are the leaves, while some plants, such as beets, are best known for their edible roots but also have edible leaves. Roots: Carrots, parsnips, and beets are plants with edible roots.

How to maximize garden production? ›

6 Ways to Maximize Your Vegetable Garden
  1. Raised beds. ...
  2. Improve the Soil. ...
  3. Smart plant selection. ...
  4. Start early, finish late. ...
  5. Plant closely. ...
  6. Water and weeds.

How do we make food more sustainable? ›

5 ways to be more sustainable with your diet
  1. Eat more plant-based meals! Meat production produces more greenhouse gases than plant production. ...
  2. Shop local for in-season produce to support your community. ...
  3. Cut Waste! ...
  4. Try to grow your own produce! ...
  5. Start the conversation!

What is the most sustainable food to grow? ›

Beans, lentils, peas and other legumes are some of the most widely available sustainable foods on the market, requiring little water to produce a high yield.

What are the 5 plant foods? ›

PlantConsumable parts of the Plant
Carrot, reddish, beetroot, etc.Root
Spinach, cabbage, lettuce, etc.Leaves
Cauliflower, Broccoli, sunflower etc.Flower
Apple, orange, banana, etc.Fruits
2 more rows

What is the most sustainable fruit to grow? ›

The most sustainable fruit is figs

They grow all year long and act as a source of food for many species, humans included. The resilience of fig trees allows them to thrive even amidst droughts and floods, making them vital in wetter regions where growing food is often difficult.

How do I make my own food supply? ›

How to Build an Emergency Food Supply
  1. Look for shelf-stable foods that don't need to be refrigerated.
  2. Once you've prepared food, it's usually no longer shelf stable.
  3. Only stock up on food your family likes and normally eats.
  4. Every six to 12 months, use your stash of food and water and rotate it.
Nov 2, 2022

What helps plants to produce food? ›

Green plants produce their own food with the help of sunlight, chlorophyll, water, nutrients from soil, and carbon dioxide from the air. This process is called photosynthesis.

How can I increase the yield of my vegetables? ›

20 Tips for Boosting the Yield from Your Vegetable Garden
  1. Nourish your soil. ...
  2. Grow regionally appropriate varieties. ...
  3. Select varieties with improved disease resistance and high yield capacity. ...
  4. Plan to plant a mix of annual and perennial fruits and vegetables. ...
  5. Start early. ...
  6. Rotate your crops every year.
Jun 9, 2020

Why is my garden not producing much? ›

If your plants are large and healthy but are not producing any fruit, nutrient levels may be the cause. When plants have too much fertilizer or an imbalance of nutrients available for uptake, they may direct all of their energy into growing new leaves, and therefore, may develop very few flowers and fruit.

How do I make my vegetable garden productive? ›

10 Tips for a Successful Vegetable Garden
  1. Seek Local Advice. ...
  2. Find a Good Location. ...
  3. Ensure Adequate Moisture and Drainage. ...
  4. Build Healthy Soil. ...
  5. Use Mulch. ...
  6. Plant the Right Plant at the Right Time. ...
  7. Monitor for Problems. ...
  8. Control Pests and Disease.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Errol Quitzon

Last Updated:

Views: 6133

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Errol Quitzon

Birthday: 1993-04-02

Address: 70604 Haley Lane, Port Weldonside, TN 99233-0942

Phone: +9665282866296

Job: Product Retail Agent

Hobby: Computer programming, Horseback riding, Hooping, Dance, Ice skating, Backpacking, Rafting

Introduction: My name is Errol Quitzon, I am a fair, cute, fancy, clean, attractive, sparkling, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.