40 Backyard Vegetable Gardening Tips to Maximize Your Harvest

Maximize your garden’s potential and grow more great-tasting organic food.

By Barbara Pleasant
Updated on December 18, 2023
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by Lynn Karlin
This garden maximizes yields by growing cut-and-come-again crops, such as chard, and by growing vertically on a trellis.

Discover gardening advice for your backyard vegetable garden, including saving money and time while gardening, wise watering, wise harvesting, home food preservation, succession sowing, extending your growing season, choosing high-yielding varieties, and seed saving.

The best way to keep top-quality, organically grown produce on your table year-round is to grow as much as you can, and preserve plenty to eat for when your garden isn’t producing. This is a worthy goal, as organic, homegrown produce is more nutritious, delicious and sustainable than the typical store-bought fare. To help your garden reach its potential, you can implement many creative growing and preserving strategies. As you attempt to grow more organic food, be realistic about the time you have to maintain your garden and manage its harvest, and don’t bite off more than you can chew.

To create a roundup of the best gardening tips on maximizing returns, I brainstormed ideas with the MOTHER EARTH NEWS editors. Then I talked with readers who left wise comments on our online gardening surveys. The result is a checklist of 40 ways to make your garden more productive. Choose the ones that work for you, and enjoy maximizing your return on the time, work and money you invest in your homegrown food supply.

Plan for Backyard Vegetable Garden Production

Whether you draw your garden plans with pencil and paper or use a software tool such as the MOTHER EARTH NEWS Vegetable Garden Planner, you’ll need to think ahead to incorporate the following yield-maximizing strategies.

1. Grow High-Value Crops. “Value” is subjective, though growing things that would be costly to buy makes good sense, provided the crops are well-suited to your climate. But value can also be about flavor, which may mean earmarking space for your favorite tomato varieties and fresh herbs first, and then considering how much money you could save by growing other crops at home.

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