Intercropping Vegetables to Increase Your Harvest

, written by Benedict Vanheems gb flag

Spinach interplanted with onions

As editor of a kitchen gardening magazine one of the questions I'm often asked by readers is, what can be done if you only have a small space in which to grow vegetables? The obvious answer is to grow crops that you most enjoy eating and that perhaps give you the biggest yield. Salad leaves, radishes, beets, zucchini and pole beans all fit into this category. The quickest growers can be repeatedly sown during the season, offering plenty of harvesting opportunities from even a bijou plot.

Another idea is to literally double up. How? By raising two vegetables in the same patch of ground at the same time. Sounds implausible I grant you, but this clever technique, known as 'intercropping', is where the smart gardener comes up trumps. With a little preparation and timing there's no reason why you can't have one vegetable starting out in life while another is reaching maturity – effectively overlapping the generations.

Double vision

The principle of intercropping is opportunism. In other words, while one vegetable is still filling out the crafty gardener sneaks in an additional crop that's long gone before the main crop needs its space. Another take on intercropping is to sow or plant between vegetables whose spacing and/or leaves naturally allow plenty of light to reach the ground so that seedlings of a later-season crop can find their feet while the earlier crop is in its final weeks of growth.

Improve your garden yield by intercropping vegetables

When you stop to think about it intercropping like this has the potential to increase the breadth of what you can grow where the traditional mindset would have you conclude you can have one crop but not the other. The one proviso to all this is that your soil must be in good shape, having had plenty of organic matter added in preparation for the start of the season so that second comers can go in without losing momentum due to depleted nutrients.

Some examples

The strappy leaves of onions and garlic ensure there's lots of scope for sunlight to reach ground level. Early to midsummer, a few weeks prior lifting these bulbs, presents a golden opportunity to sow the seeds of maincrop roots, including carrots and beets. Sown midway between your established rows of alliums they will happily germinate and develop into young plants so that by the time they need the room, your bulbs will have been hoiked out for eating, drying and storing.

The second half of summer is a good time to sow seeds or plant seedlings of fall salads such as mizuna, arugula or lamb's lettuce. The first two are brassicas which have a horrid tendency to run to seed in a natural response to the days getting longer – by the latter half of summer the days are already beginning to draw in (a depressing thought, but let's not dwell on it!) keeping these plants squat and producing plenty of luscious leaves rather than flowers. Try positioning these salads in-between the likes of bush beans, heads of regularly picked lettuce or beneath the frothy leaves of Florence fennel. Time your new intercrops so that they are sown or planted two to four weeks before the existing crop is removed to the compost heap.

Arugula interplanted with cauliflowers

An alternative to the above salads are young plants of module or pot-raised winter brassicas – the likes of kale, sprouting broccoli and cabbages. A tidy overlap makes really efficient use of space, ensuring a prompt start to picking.

Then, of course, there are the salads that are sown, grown and picked all within the time it takes for another vegetable just to establish. Summer squash, leeks and corn will all allow plenty of room between plants in their infant weeks – just long enough to enjoy a rapid round of radish, scallions, cut-and-come-again salad or baby turnips. Of course, it's important to sow early on to avoid your salads being smothered or shaded by their lofty or rambunctious neighbours!

Sowing versus planting

For many quick growers and root crops sowing directly between an existing vegetable is a convenient, no-nonsense approach to starting off your intercrop. To intersow, simply remove any weeds then carefully fluff up the soil between the existing plants with a hand fork taking great pains not to unsettle its roots. Mark out your seed drill and sow accordingly. Whichever of the two crops is first to finish should be delicately twisted out of the soil in such a way that leaves the remaining crop undisturbed.

Intercropping lettuce between young asparagus

Interplanting – when module tray or pot-raised seedlings are planted out (rather than sown) between an existing crop – has its advantages. It does away with any need for thinning seedlings, which is trickier when delving through the foliage of another 'in the way' crop to get at them. Interplanting also extends the period of overlap, enabling seedlings to get well underway before they are committed to the ground. This is also a great way of getting around the problem of weeding, as the young plants will be big enough to distinguish from emerging weed seedlings, enabling worry-free hand weeding or hoeing.

Intercropping is the vegetable grower's secret weapon. Sow and plant tactically and you will boost the total take from your plot with ease. I'm sure I've missed some classic intercropping combinations above, so please feel free to share your own tried-and-tested double acts below.

By Benedict Vanheems.

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Comments

 
"I recently instinctively tried this with carrots between my juvenile broccoli and it looks like it will be a winner. The broccoli are nearly heading and the carrot shoots are just sprouting, so by the time broccoli is done carrots will be we'll established. Maybe a little timing overlap but I can always thin the broccoli. "
Mark on Friday 28 June 2013
"Excellent Mark - sounds like you're well on course to a double crop!"
Benedict Vanheems on Friday 28 June 2013
"My garlic has about another week or two. I think I will try sowing my carrots by them. "
Lisa on Friday 28 June 2013
"can I sow parsnips underneath Aztec Broccoli? "
Susan Wyatt on Friday 28 June 2013
"can I sow parsnips underneath Aztec Broccoli? "
Susan Wyatt on Friday 28 June 2013
"It would be nice to have a link to what to plant with what and when. Not that I am a lazy gardener, just a newbie that needs a bit of direction."
Liz on Friday 28 June 2013
"Hi Susan. I'm guessing by Aztec Broccoli you mean huazontle or pigweed - a vegetable prepared in a similar way to spinach or broccoli? I have no experience of growing this personally, though I notice it grows up to 4 feet high. My concern is it would swamp establishing parsnip seedlings, so I'd probably plant it separately to parsnips as they risk becoming very shaded and dry. It sounds like a fascinating plant - I'll have to give it a try!"
Benedict Vanheems on Wednesday 3 July 2013
" This is the best way of harvesting maximum from minimum space especially in the areas where the land holding is decreasing for population pressure. To run the house from small holding, inter-cropping may be helpful to augment the income per unit area."
O.P.Lathwal on Thursday 16 June 2016
"What is the best way to show Intercropping on the App?"
Kenneth on Friday 17 April 2020
"Hi Kenneth. You could overlap the colored backgrounds that show the amount of space plants normally need in the Garden Planner. Or add plants individually, for instance if just a few plants are being grown between another crop in a row or block. Setting in-ground dates for your crops helps you see when and where crops will be harvested, so you can plan to sow or plant a new crop in between or closely alongside a few weeks before harvest. Please contact the customer support team using the Contact button at the top of the page if you're not sure how to do this, and we'll be happy to help."
GrowVeg Customer Support on Friday 17 April 2020
"Excellent article . Thought provoking."
Eric on Saturday 6 February 2021
"It's the 22 April and I've just sown Parsnips. I'm thinking of planting some of my Greyhound Cabbage plants in between the rows they should be cropping by late June"
Andrew Hague on Thursday 22 April 2021
"Hi Andrew. That's a good time to sow parsnips, at least here in the UK. The Greyhound cabbages may just about race through to harvest before the parsnips need the extra space - could be worth a try I reckon."
Ben Vanheems on Friday 23 April 2021

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