Pelham Gardens
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Grow Guide

Raised Bed Growing

Crops for Raised Beds

Raised beds warm up faster in spring, drain better than open ground, and give you complete control over your soil. These crops are particularly well-suited to raised bed growing — producing higher yields in a smaller footprint.

37 crops

Beetroot

Beetroot

vegetable · Easy

Deep earthy sweetness with striking colour. Sow little and often for a long harvest window.

Broad Bean

Broad Bean

vegetable · Easy

A British growing tradition. Sow in autumn for an early crop or in late winter for summer. Blackfly is easily managed — don't let it put you off.

Chives

Chives

herb · Easy

Mild onion flavour with delicate purple flowers. Cut back regularly for a continuous supply of fresh snipping leaves.

French Bean

French Bean

vegetable · Easy

One of the easiest and most productive crops for a UK summer. Sow after the last frost, keep picking, and they'll produce armfuls of pods from July through September.

Garlic

Garlic

vegetable · Easy

A slow-growing kitchen staple with intense flavour. Plant in autumn for the biggest bulbs and earliest harvest.

Kale

Kale

vegetable · Easy

Hardy and nutritious. Flavour improves after the first frost — a winter staple.

Lettuce

Lettuce

vegetable · Easy

Fast-growing and versatile. Sow every two weeks for a continuous harvest all season.

Marigold

Marigold

flower · Easy

A companion planting essential. Deters pests and brings colour to any growing space.

Onion

Onion

vegetable · Easy

A kitchen essential. Grow from seed indoors or plant sets directly for a reliable midsummer harvest.

Pak Choi

Pak Choi

vegetable · Easy

Fast-growing Asian greens with crisp stems and tender leaves. Ready in as little as 4–6 weeks from sowing. Perfect for spring and autumn gaps when other crops are slow.

Peas

Peas

vegetable · Easy

Sweet and tender straight from the pod. Easy to grow with the right support in place.

Radish

Radish

vegetable · Easy

Ready in as little as four weeks. Perfect for filling gaps between slower crops.

Runner Bean

Runner Bean

vegetable · Easy

Prolific climbers that produce through the whole summer. A British garden staple with vivid red flowers.

Shallots

Shallots

vegetable · Easy

Sweet, mild and versatile in the kitchen. Each planted bulb multiplies into a cluster of 6–12 shallots by harvest time. Far easier to grow than onions and stores well through winter.

Spring Onion

Spring Onion

vegetable · Easy

One of the fastest and most useful crops in the kitchen garden. Sow every few weeks and you'll have fresh spring onions continuously from spring to late autumn.

Sunflower

Sunflower

flower · Easy

Bold and cheerful. A favourite with pollinators and a natural companion to vegetables.

Sweet Pea

Sweet Pea

flower · Easy

Intensely fragrant climbing flowers. The more you pick, the more they bloom — a British garden essential.

Swiss Chard

Swiss Chard

vegetable · Easy

Colourful, cut-and-come-again leaves with striking stems. One of the most reliable crops for a long harvest.

Turnip

Turnip

vegetable · Easy

Fast-growing and underrated. Baby turnips are sweet and tender; larger roots are great for roasting. One of the quickest root crops — ready in as little as 6 weeks.

Basil

Basil

herb · Easy–Medium

Aromatic and tender. Grows best with warmth — plant alongside tomatoes for a classic combination.

Cabbage

Cabbage

vegetable · Easy–Medium

A British kitchen garden staple available almost year-round with the right variety choices. Spring, summer, autumn and winter types mean there's always a cabbage ready to harvest.

Carrot

Carrot

vegetable · Easy–Medium

Sweet and earthy straight from the ground. Needs loose, stone-free soil for long, straight roots.

Courgette

Courgette

vegetable · Easy–Medium

Prolific and easy to grow. Harvest young for the best flavour and keep plants producing.

Leek

Leek

vegetable · Easy–Medium

A British winter staple with a long, generous harvest window. Sow early, transplant in summer and harvest through the coldest months when the garden is bare.

Parsley

Parsley

herb · Easy–Medium

Slow to start but worth the wait. Sow early indoors for a long, productive harvest from late spring through autumn.

Parsnip

Parsnip

vegetable · Easy–Medium

The sweetest root vegetable in the winter garden. Parsnips are slow to mature but reward patience with deep, honeyed flavour — best harvested after the first frosts of autumn.

Potato

Potato

vegetable · Easy–Medium

The most satisfying crop to harvest. Plant seed potatoes in spring, earth up through early summer, and dig the first earlies in June. Few things in the garden beat new potatoes straight from the ground.

Pumpkin

Pumpkin

vegetable · Easy–Medium

Dramatic, productive and deeply seasonal. Give them rich soil, plenty of space and reliable water — they'll fill a bed by harvest time.

Purple Sprouting Broccoli

Purple Sprouting Broccoli

vegetable · Easy–Medium

A long-season crop that earns its space. Sow in spring, harvest tender purple spears through late winter when almost nothing else is cropping.

Raspberry

Raspberry

fruit · Easy–Medium

One of the most rewarding soft fruits for the allotment. Plant summer-fruiting canes and you'll have a picking row that returns every year with minimal effort.

Spinach

Spinach

vegetable · Easy–Medium

Fast-growing and nutrient-dense. Sow in spring and again in late summer to avoid the bolting season.

Squash

Squash

vegetable · Easy–Medium

Hugely productive and available in a remarkable range of shapes and colours. Give squash rich soil, plenty of space and reliable water — it will fill a bed by harvest time and keep producing into autumn.

Strawberry

Strawberry

fruit · Easy–Medium

The most rewarding fruit to grow at home. Plant crowns in late summer or early spring for a bumper harvest the following June.

Sweetcorn

Sweetcorn

vegetable · Easy–Medium

Hard to find truly fresh in the shops — growing your own is the only way to eat sweetcorn at its best. Sow in blocks, water well, and harvest within hours of picking for the full flavour.

Tomato

Tomato

vegetable · Easy–Medium

Rich, sun-ripened fruits packed with flavour. Start indoors for a long and rewarding season.

Cauliflower

Cauliflower

vegetable · Medium

Demanding but deeply satisfying. Cauliflower needs consistent moisture, good soil and careful timing — get those right and a home-grown head is far superior to anything bought in a shop.

Celery

Celery

vegetable · Medium–Hard

The most demanding crop in this guide. Celery needs consistent moisture, warm soil, and a long season. Get those right and the reward is crisp, intensely flavoured stalks — nothing like the pale supermarket version.

Grower's Notes

Expert Tips

01

Fill new raised beds with a mix of topsoil (60%) and compost (40%).

Top up with compost each spring — this is the single most productive thing you can do.

02

Plant in blocks rather than rows to make the most of the space and improve air circulation around plants.

03

A deep raised bed (30–45cm) allows root crops like carrots and parsnips to develop to their full length without restriction.

04

Companion planting works particularly well in raised beds

interplant marigolds, nasturtiums and basil throughout to deter pests naturally.

05

Rotate crops between beds each year

avoid growing brassicas, legumes, or alliums in the same bed two years running.

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