Succession Planting… Without Replanting

March 17, 2026 | News

How to Harvest for Weeks — By Simply Choosing the Right Varieties

There’s something most of us were taught about succession planting:  Sow every 2–3 weeks.”

And yes… that works beautifully. But in a real garden — with kids, life, work, and everything in between — it’s not always realistic to keep sowing on a strict schedule. So here’s a simpler, smarter way… Plant everything at once — but use different varieties. And let your seed choice do the timing for you.

The Idea That Changes Everything

Instead of thinking:  When should I plant again?” You start thinking: Which varieties can I plant together… so they harvest at different times?”

Because every variety grows at a different speed. Some are quick. Some take their time. Some sit in the soil longer, building size and flavour. And when you plant them together? You create a natural flow of harvest.

Cabbage — A Perfect  Example

If you plant one cabbage variety, you’ll harvest everything at once. (And suddenly you have 10 cabbages ready on the same day)

When choosing a wide range of cabbage varieties —  things get exciting.

For example:

Early Round Dutchfast maturing (great for shorter seasons)
Larger heirloom cabbages – slower, longer growing
Red cabbages – often take a bit longer to mature

And cabbage in general prefers cooler seasons like early spring or late summer.

How to Use This Practically

Plant all your cabbage seedlings at the same time:

Variety TypeWhat Happens
Early varietyFirst heads ready quickly
Medium varietyHarvest follows a few weeks later
Late varietyFinal harvest stretches your season

 

Same planting day, completely different harvest times. No extra sowing needed.

Peas — Another Beautiful Example

Peas are one of the easiest crops to succession plant using varieties. You can even get 2–3 crops in a season if timed well. But even within one planting… You can stretch your harvest beautifully.

Different Types of Peas to Combine

Instead of planting just one type, mix:

Sugar snap peasquick, early harvest
Snow peasflat pods, slightly different timing
Shelling peastake longer to mature fully

Each one grows at a slightly different pace. So even if planted on the same day: You’ll be picking peas over weeks — not days.

Why This Works So Well 

This method fits perfectly with how we garden locally.

Because:

Our seasons can shift quickly
Weather can change unexpectedly
Life gets busy

And instead of relying on perfect timing… You build flexibility into your garden. You’re not chasing the calendar —you’re working with plant genetics.

A Simple Planting Layout Idea

Instead of planting in blocks like this:

One bed = one variety

Try this:

Mix varieties across the same bed

For example (cabbage bed):

3 early cabbages
3 mid-season
3 late varieties

All planted together.

There’s something else that happens when you do this…  You reduce overwhelm.  No more, too much harvest at once, food going to waste, panic preserving. Instead, you get a steady flow, a fresh harvest and you have a lot less pressure.

Let’s work smarter in the Garden and not harder!

Happy Gardening Friends

Tash & Family

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