calculator.gdSeedSpacingTitle
Guide détaillé à venir
Nous préparons un guide éducatif complet pour le Seed Spacing to Yield. Revenez bientôt pour des explications étape par étape, des formules, des exemples concrets et des conseils d'experts.
The Seed Spacing to Yield Converter calculates how many plants fit in a garden bed based on recommended spacing and projects total expected harvest pounds. Spacing requirements are crop-specific: tomatoes 24–36 inches (single plants per square foot effectively), lettuce 6–12 inches (4–25 per sqft depending on cultivar), carrots 2–4 inches (16–100 per sqft), bush beans 4–6 inches, broccoli 18–24 inches. Calculator formula: Plants Fit = Bed Sqft ÷ (Spacing inches × Spacing inches / 144); Total Yield = Plants × Per-Plant Yield. Typical per-plant yield figures (full season, healthy conditions): indeterminate tomato 8–12 lb, determinate tomato 4–8 lb, lettuce head 0.5–1 lb, cucumber 5–10 lb, bush bean 0.5–1 lb, pole bean 1–2 lb, broccoli 0.5–1.5 lb main head plus side shoots, zucchini/summer squash 10–20 lb (notoriously prolific), bell pepper 5–10 lb. Yield depends on variety, soil quality, water/fertilizer management, pest pressure, season length, and gardener skill. New gardeners typically achieve 50–70% of these benchmarks; experienced gardeners with optimized systems often exceed them. Bed sizing context: standard raised bed 4×8 feet = 32 sqft. Square foot gardening method packs 1, 4, 9, or 16 plants per square foot depending on plant size — a 4×4 bed grows 1 tomato + 16 carrots + 4 lettuces per square foot in different squares = substantial output. Intensive spacing (closer than recommended) increases yield per sqft but reduces per-plant yield and increases disease risk; wide spacing is opposite. Most home gardeners find recommended spacing optimal balance. Who needs this: backyard gardeners planning bed layout, allotment renters maximizing limited space, urban gardeners with containers, school garden coordinators, food forest designers, market gardeners scaling production. The calculation reveals surprising abundance — even a small 4×4 bed can produce $200–500 worth of vegetables annually at retail prices. The 'pay yourself for gardening' framing motivates new gardeners — at $5/hour effective labor cost (typical), gardens yielding $300 of produce return $300 worth of $5/hour 'wages' for the season's work.
- 1Step 1 — Identify your crop and its recommended spacing (seed packet, almanac, extension service)
- 2Step 2 — Measure your available bed size in square feet
- 3Step 3 — Look up typical per-plant yield (lb) for your crop variety
- 4Step 4 — Enter spacing, bed size, and yield per plant
- 5Step 5 — Calculator computes spacing in sqft (Spacing² / 144)
- 6Step 6 — Divides bed area by per-plant area to get number of plants that fit
- 7Step 7 — Multiplies plants by per-plant yield for total harvest estimate
24×24 inch = 4 sqft per plant. 40/4 = 10 plants. At 8 lb each = 80 lb tomatoes. Retail equivalent ~$240–480.
Lettuce can be harvested cut-and-come-again for multiple yields per plant
Square foot gardening: 1 tomato + 16 carrots + 4 lettuces per sqft = different yields per crop. Sum totals.
Beans grow densely. Single bed feeds family for season with surplus to freeze.
Annual garden planning and bed layout
Seed/transplant ordering quantities
Yield expectation setting (especially for new gardeners)
Comparing intensive vs traditional spacing methods
Succession planting calendar planning
Small-scale market gardener bed math
Can I plant closer than recommended spacing?
Yes with caveats. Intensive spacing (75–85% of recommended) typically increases per-sqft yield by 30–60% but reduces per-plant yield and increases disease risk (poor airflow, fungal pressure). The square foot gardening method (Mel Bartholomew) intentionally packs plants closer than traditional spacing — works well for leafy greens, mediocre for fruit-bearing crops. Start at recommended spacing for first year, then experiment closer in subsequent years.
How accurate are the per-plant yield estimates?
Estimates are full-season averages for healthy, well-tended plants. New gardeners typically achieve 50–70%; experienced gardeners 100–130% of estimates. Variables: soil quality (compost amended >> compacted clay), water consistency (drip irrigation >> hand-watering), pest pressure (organic management critical), variety selection (heirloom often lower yield but better flavor), season length (longer in southern zones). Track your actual yields year-over-year for personal calibration.
What about succession planting?
Same bed, multiple harvests per year. Lettuce: spring + fall crops (skip hot summer). Radishes: 30-day crop, succession every 2 weeks for continuous harvest. Beans: spring + fall bush, summer pole. Multiple harvests can 2–4× total annual yield from same bed. Calculator handles single crop; for succession multiply by number of harvests reasonably possible.
How do containers compare to in-ground beds?
Containers limit root volume which limits plant size and yield. Rule of thumb: 5 gallons per major plant (tomato, pepper, large lettuce); 1 gallon per small plant (smaller herb, single lettuce). Container yields typically 60–80% of in-ground equivalent for same spacing. Compensating factors: containers warm faster in spring, can be moved for optimal light, easier to manage soil quality. Calculator's yield estimates assume in-ground beds — adjust down 20–40% for containers.
What's the realistic dollar value of a home garden?
Backyard gardens produce $200–500 retail-equivalent food per 4×8 bed annually with mid-skill management. Heirloom varieties and out-of-season vegetables (greens in winter, fresh herbs year-round) can multiply this 3–5×. Time investment: 30–80 hours/season per bed. Effective hourly rate: $3–10/hour, suggesting gardening is rarely cost-efficient labor — but most gardeners cite non-economic benefits (taste, quality, exercise, satisfaction) as primary motivation.
Conseil Pro
Match plant spacing to plant root + leaf size, not just stem location. A 12-inch carrot root + neighbor competition means 2-inch carrots need 2-inch spacing for ROOT but adequate light. Most beginner gardener problems come from underestimating mature plant size. When in doubt, give plants more space — undercrowding is forgiving; overcrowding cuts yield substantially.