
I love getting my hands in the dirt every chance I can get. Whether it’s weeding in the morning while soaking in the sunshine, or destressing after a rough day. I’ve learned a lot over the years and have continued to make changes in my vegetable gardens as I’ve grown. One of these helpful strategies has been succession planting.
If you’ve ever wished your harvests would last longer or you could get more food from the same amount of garden space, this technique is worth learning. Succession planting can help stretch your growing season and minimize waste. Plus, it can make gardening more enjoyable, not more stressful.
What Is Succession Planting?
Whether you’re a home gardener with a few raised beds or you’re planting a larger homestead garden, succession planting is a great strategy. It works across hardiness zones and adapts beautifully to both traditional and container gardening. It also lets you enjoy more of your favorite veggies, from quick growers like radishes to more space-demanding crops like cucumbers and bush beans.
Succession planting is a gardening method that involves sowing or transplanting crops one after the other, instead of all at once. Instead of planting all your lettuce, bush beans, or arugula on the same day and watching them mature at the same time, you stagger planting dates. This helps you enjoy a continuous harvest throughout the growing season.
It’s like having a planting calendar that keeps your garden beds in action from early spring to late summer (and beyond). The key is to match your sowing schedule with your climate, frost dates, and days to maturity. If you’re not sure how long each veggie takes to grow, check the back of its seed packet.
There are a few different ways to do succession planting:
- Planting the same crop at different planting times. Like sowing lettuce or radishes every 1–2 weeks.
- Using different crops in the same space. For example, planting cool season crops like spinach or turnips early, followed by warm season crops like cucumbers or eggplant.
- Interplanting your garden. Like sowing fast-maturing crops like arugula or cilantro in between larger, slower crops like cauliflower or kohlrabi.
- Relay planting and starting transplants indoors while other crops are growing outdoors.
Succession planning helps you more effectively use your garden space. It’s also easier to time your crops for the best quality, taste, and nutritional value.
Why Succession Planting Works (And Why You’d Want to Try It)
We all know that person (or have been that person!) with a mountain of zucchini to use or give away. And if you’ve ever watched a whole row of lettuce bolt at once, you know the struggle of harvesting everything at the same time. Succession planting helps prevent both having too much or too little produce by spacing things out. But there are more strategic reasons to incorporate this method into your garden planning.
Maximize Your Harvests
By consistently sowing seeds or replanting transplants, you use your space more efficiently. When one crop finishes, you direct sow the next. It’s like keeping your garden on a productive cycle that lasts all season long. This approach also provides a safety net for missed germination or unpredictable pests. If one planting doesn’t take off, you have another coming soon.
Extend the Growing Season
If you don’t already know your area’s USDA Hardiness Zone, that’s important to know before starting. You want to see when your last frost date is at the beginning of the growing season, and the first frost date at the end. This way you can time when different plants or seeds need to go in the ground.
By matching planting times to crop needs, you can grow heat-tolerant veggies like summer squash and cucumbers in early and mid-summer. Once fall is around the corner, then shift to cool season crops like beets, radishes, and swiss chard. Depending on your area, you can even extend the growing season with these fall garden tips.
Avoid Waste
No more eating radishes three times a day or giving away baskets of bush beans. By sowing smaller amounts at different intervals, you get more manageable harvests spread out over time. This not only helps in the kitchen but also reduces food waste and the stress of sudden, massive harvests. You can also still use succession planting even if you do want a bunch of one crop at once for food preservation.
Improve Soil and Pest Management
Rotating brassicas, greens, and legumes through the same bed keeps your soil balanced and can interrupt pest cycles. Frequent replanting encourages diverse root systems, which in turn fosters better soil biology and nutrient cycling. Plus, many fall crops like turnips, kohlrabi, and cauliflower get better after a light frost.
How to Do Succession Planting
Thankfully, you don’t need anything fancier to get started than a little research and a pen and paper! A notebook, some seed packets, and knowing your local frost dates will get you started. Here are the main things to keep in mind:
When to Succession Plant
Your planting calendar will depend heavily on your region’s frost dates. Early spring is usually a great time to direct sow fast-growing cool weather crops like spinach, radishes, and arugula. By the time those are harvested, you can follow up with warm season crops like bush beans, eggplant, tomatoes, or cucumbers. You can even use trellises to create a vertical garden for more space.
By mid-summer, it’s time to look ahead to fall crops. Start seeds indoors or direct seed things like beets, Swiss chard, cilantro, and brassicas. Depending on your zone, you’ll usually want to start these in early August. Just be sure they have enough time to mature before the first frost.
Keep an eye on your planting dates, and always factor in the days to maturity. A good rule of thumb is to add about 10–14 days for fall crops to account for slower growth as daylight shortens.
If you have raised beds, succession planting is even easier. Their well-drained soil warms faster in spring and is easier to replant between crops. Some home gardeners even prep several mini-beds within larger raised beds for specific sowing intervals. This allows a more efficient use of space and reduces competition between different plantings.
What to Plant and When
Some crops work better than others for succession planting. In general, you want plants with shorter days to maturity and the ability to tolerate either cool or hot weather, depending on the season. Crops with fast germination or heat tolerance tend to do well with succession planting.
Best Crops for Succession Planting:
- Radishes (sow every 7–10 days)
- Arugula and lettuce (sow seeds every 10–14 days)
- Bush beans (sow every 2 weeks through mid-summer)
- Beets (sow every 2–3 weeks)
- Cilantro (every 2–3 weeks; best in early spring and late summer)
- Turnips and kohlrabi (ideal for late summer sowing)
- Spinach and Swiss chard (great as fall crops)
- Cucumbers and summer squash (replant as older plants fade)
- Cauliflower, kale, and other brassicas (in cooler weather)
Be sure to check the seed packet or company website for each variety you grow. The days to maturity will help you count backward from your average first frost. You want to make sure it has enough time to mature for harvest! If it’s snowing in November, then there’s no sense in planting cucumbers in October.
If you’re direct seeding outdoors, be sure the soil temperature isn’t too high or too low. Different seeds germinate best within certain temperature ranges. This resource offers a great guide for keeping an eye on the temperature as you’re seed starting.
Tips for Successful Succession Planting
If you’re ready to get started, here are a few things to help the process.
- Use a trellis to grow vining crops vertically and free up more bed space. Cucumbers, small melons, and vining beans work well for this.
- Try different varieties of the same veggie. Mixing things up offers more diverse nutrition and flavor.
- Overwinter certain crops (like spinach, garlic, or parsnips) to get a head start next year.
- Keep track of germination and harvest dates in a garden journal or digital app.
- Plan ahead using a planting calendar based on your USDA zone.
- Use direct sowing for quick crops and transplants for slower growers.
- Replant as soon as a bed is harvested to avoid production gaps and bare soil.
- Try companion planting and interplanting to make the most of mixed beds.
- Cover bare soil with mulch or compost between plantings. This helps preserve moisture and suppress weeds.
Final Thoughts on Succession Planting
Succession planting can seem a little overwhelming at first if you’re not used to planting this way. The key is to plan ahead so you’re not always wondering what to do next and when! It’s a great way to have fresh veggies all season long. Plus, it’s good for the soil health and makes harvesting less overwhelming.
This approach can be both a practical and rewarding way to enjoy a continuous harvest throughout the growing season!
Have you ever done any succession planting before? How do you plan your garden? Leave a comment and let us know!