How much should you grow in your garden for a years worth of food for your family?
I don’t know about you, but every year I feel the cool air quickly turn to spring and all of a sudden (insert panic) I can’t seem to remember how much of anything to plant.
And, every year I seem to ask myself the same question; “how much do I need to plant in our garden to supply my family with enough food for the winter?”
Are you trying to figure out how much you will need too?
Well, I’ve gathered up some of my favorite resources and I’m hoping to break it all down for you. So, you can take the guess work out of your garden planning and spend more time actually gardening.
If you are new to My Happy Homestead you can ‘meet our family here“. We have not always lived in the country; in fact, most of our lives we have lived in the city. So, growing all of our own food was not really an option in the past; although, we certainly did the best we could with what resources we had available at the time.
We had strawberry gardens, a raspberry garden, a small scale garden, and picked local seasonally ripe food from area farms whenever possible. We ordered a cow, a pig, and shopped at local famers markets on a regular basis. You can check out how I shop for our family of 6 once a month here.
All that said, our ancestors did not have the luxury of having a grocery store on every corner they depended solely upon growing a garden, having a farm, saving seeds, and preserving their harvest for survival. A garden was not a tiny, pretty little space in a perfectly manicured back yard – the garden was the entire yard. There wasn’t weekend dance classes, sporting events, and weekly parties to attend. And, there certainly wasn’t countless vacations to be had. Life was the farm, and the farm meant survival.
Since I only shop once a month for our family of six I am keenly aware of how much food we consume. I pretty much have it down to a science {now, that goes with out saying as the kids have gotten older I have had to make some adjustments}.
But, I know we need 5-6 six packs of yogurt, 5 cans of each kind of bean {kidney, black, pinto, etc}, 1 Costco size sour cream, 3-4 gallons of milk, 2 lbs of ground meat for every meal, 8 packs of waffles, 3 bags/boxes of cereal, and on, and on.
So, just how much ‘How Much Should You Plant In Your Garden for a Years Worth of Food for Your Family’ {disclaimer some of these we still have not grown but, this is based on my personal experience and research}
Asparagus 1-4 plants per person
Bush Beans 10- 15 plants per person
Pole Beans 10-15 plants per person
Beets 10-15 plants per person
Broccoli – 8 plants per person
Brussel Sprouts – 4 plants per person
Cabbage – 5 plants per person
Carrots 20-30 plants per person (100 seed pack would/should feed a family of 6)
Cauliflower – 5 plants per person
Celery – 4-8 plants per person
Corn – 20-40 plants per person
Cucumber – 5 plants per person
Egg plant – 1 plants per person (plus an additional 2-3 per family)
Kale – 1 5′ row
Lettuce – 10 -12 plants {obviously you can no preserve this over the winter months but, you can stagger your growing to harvest most of the year)
Onions – 30 plants per person
Peas – 30 plants per person
Peppers – 8 plants per person
Potatoes – 20-25 plants per person
Pumpkins – 1 plant per person {1-2 additional for the family}
Rhubarb – 2 crowns per family
Spinach – 10 -20 plants per person
Summer squash – 3 plants per person {there’s nothing like shredded zucchini already prepared for quick breads)
Winter Squash – 2 plants per person
Sweet Potatoes – 5 plants per person
Tomatoes – 5-8 plants per person
Another way to figure out how much your family would need to grow for the winter is think of how much your family consumes and research the approximate yield on a given plant.
For example; if it was estimated that a 10 ft. row of bush beans would yield 3-5 lbs. yield then, I know I would need approx. 100+ ft. row to sustain my family over the winter as we consume approximately 5-6 lbs. of green beans per month.
Of coarse this could not be broken down into an exact science since weather, natural disaster, and pests can all affect yield.
What I can tell you is this – plant what you like to eat and plant what you will use. If you are short on space plant what you can with what room you have available.
Do you have room behind your garage? That’s where our berry garden used to be. Try planting food where you would plant flowers – replace the dying tree in the corner of the yard with a fruit tree instead of an ornamental piece.
And, start learning about harvesting your seeds – there is nothing more rewarding than knowing you grew something from a tiny seed and you were able to save the seeds for next years harvest thus, repeating the cycle of life.