Vegetable growing
		
		
		
		Jump to navigation
		Jump to search
		
Main > Food and Agriculture > Growing plants
This page discusses how to make vegetable beds more productive.
- Plant the vegetables in waves rather than in rows. This allows you to fit more plants in a bed without reducing the space between plants.
 - Use mulch or living mulch such as clover. Clover will also
 - Biochar
 - Worms
 - Fungal symbiosis:
- Elm oyster mushrooms (hypsizygus ulmarius) or garden giants (stropharia rugosoannulata) grown in vegetable beds will raise yields. Scatter some colonized grain, straw or cardboard into the beds.
 - There is plenty of research showing that mycorrhizal spores increase yields. Liquid spore solution can be added to seeds. It is available quite cheaply here. Mycelium Running say: "Mycorrhizologists harvest spores from wild or greenhouse-cultivated mycorrhizal puffball- or truffleshaped mushrooms from fungi like Glomus, Pisolithus, and Rhizopogon. Mature mushrooms are selected, pulverized into a powder, and then shaken through varied-size mesh screens until the fine spores fall through the bottommost screen (with the smallest openings)."
 - Endophytic fungi (fungi that grow within plants) can boost yields
 
 - Companion planting - see Wikipedia's list of companion plants