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What is Companion Planting?

Companion planting: A natural way to boost your garden

Companion planting is a gardening technique that involves planting different crops together to improve their health and productivity. It is a natural way to control pests and diseases, attract beneficial insects, and improve soil health. Companion planting can be used in any type of garden, from small vegetable plots to large orchards. By planting different crops together, you can boost yields, reduce pest and disease pressure, improve soil health, and attract beneficial insects.

Here are a few of the most important benefits:

  • Increased yields: Companion planting can help to increase yields by improving the overall health of the plants. When plants are healthy, they are better able to resist pests and diseases, and they produce more food.
  • Reduced pest and disease pressure: Companion plants can help to repel pests and diseases, and they can also attract beneficial insects that prey on pests. This can help to reduce the need for chemical pesticides.
  • Improved soil health: Companion plants can help to improve soil health by fixing nitrogen, adding organic matter, and suppressing weeds.
  • Attraction of beneficial insects: Many companion plants attract beneficial insects, such as ladybugs, lacewings, and parasitic wasps. These insects help to control pests and improve plant health.
  • Improved flavor: Some companion plants can actually improve the flavor of other plants. For example, planting basil near tomatoes can help to enhance the tomato flavor.

Six Good Reasons To Use Companion Planting Techniques:

1. Increase Your Odds – If you grow more varieties of plants in one area you’ll increase your odds if one crop dies out.

2. Protective Helper Plants – For example, some plants can protect the soil, while other plants can act as a trellis for climbing plants. Meanwhile, the climbing plants can give shade for another crop that needs it. With vertical space efficiently used, the overall yield of a garden area will increase.

One example of this would be the “tres hermanas” or “three sisters” style of planting. Indigenous people of central america have used this thousands year old technique to plant corn, squash and beans all together. The beans would climb the corn, the squash would shade the ground and hold in moisture, meanwhile all three would produce food. I suggest a similar technique for growing winged beans in their database entry.

3. Wind Breaks – Some plants can be grown in a line or circle around more delicate plants to provide protection from the wind. Any bushy or thick plant can make a good windbreak, but in a survival garden, I suggest planting something that has dual purpose. For example, we use lemon grass and pigeon peas in some areas as wind breaks. Both grow quickly and have benefits of their own. Lemon grass, a useful tea and spice is also known to repel insects. Pigeon peas provide high protein food and also can be used as trellises for climbing plants.

4. Attract Beneficial Insects – Some companion plants may help prevent undesirable insects or pathogenic fungi from damaging the crop through chemical means. Some plants actually recruit predatory insects that are beneficial. According to Oregon State University, plants that produce large amounts of nectar or pollen in a vegetable gardens may help encourage higher populations of beneficial insects that control pests. The reason is, some beneficial predatory insects only consume pests in their larval form and are nectar or pollen feeders as adults.

5. Smell Confusion – Insects, like humans use their sense of smell to recognize tasty food. Some strongly scented plants can confuse or distract their olfactory system and keep them away from your veggies. We use various herbs and varieties of Spanish Thyme planted among our veggie beds. It seems to work well in our garden. However, we have yet to find any plant that deters iguanas.

6. Monoculture Sucks

One issue with monoculture farming and gardening is pests that are attracted to one species have all they can eat and easily hop from plant to plant like an all you can eat buffet. If there isn’t a good variety of plants, then the area will not promote a healthy ecosystem of predatory insects.

Companion planting chart to download and print
Print PDF with link below

There are many different ways to companion plant.(See chart above) Some common combinations include:

  • Beans and corn: Beans fix nitrogen in the soil, which benefits the corn. Corn provides a trellis for the beans to climb.
  • Carrots and onions: Carrots repel onion pests, and onions repel carrot pests.
  • Cucumbers and beans: Cucumbers and beans can be planted together to help suppress weeds and improve air circulation.
  • Marigolds and tomatoes: Marigolds repel tomato pests, and tomatoes provide a taller plant for the marigolds to grow under.
  • Nasturtiums and cabbage: Nasturtiums repel cabbage pests, and cabbage provides a taller plant for the nasturtiums to climb.
  • Tomatoes and basil: Basil helps to repel tomato hornworms and other pests.
  • Cabbage and marigolds: Marigolds repel cabbage moths and other pests.
  • Peas and lettuce: Peas fix nitrogen in the soil, which benefits the lettuce.
  • Carrots and onions: Onions repel carrot fly larvae.
  • Potatoes and beans: Beans fix nitrogen in the soil, which benefits the potatoes.

When choosing companion plants, it is important to consider the needs of the plants involved. For example, some plants need full sun while others prefer partial shade. Some plants need acidic soil while others prefer alkaline soil. It is also important to consider the height of the plants. Taller plants should be planted behind shorter plants so that they do not shade them out.

Companion planting is a fun and rewarding way to garden. By planting different crops together, you can create a more productive and pest-resistant garden.

Written by survivalgardener

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