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10 Really Easy Veggies to Grow for New Gardeners

Gardening Guide: The Easy Peasy Guide to Growing Pea Plants: All You Need to Know About Growing, Harvesting, Cooking, and Eating Delicious Peas

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10 Really Easy Veggies to Grow for New Gardeners

New to gardening? Need some easy veggies to grow? Neglect these all you want; they’ll still flourish.

By Amanda MacArthur

Easy Veggies to Grow

In theory, growing vegetables should be pretty easy. Put your seeds in the ground, water them, and a week later you have adorable little sprouts. 60 or so days later you’re sitting at your table enjoying a spinach salad, sweet summer squash, and planning to make pickles from your abundance of cucumbers. But…

Let’s face it. Some of us need easy veggies to grow. We forget to water them. We plant them too close together. We aren’t sure what weeds look like, so we don’t pull them. I remember the first time I tried to grow spinach and watched a promising harvest fade before my eyes, not knowing what went wrong. 

There’s something to be said for starting out with easy veggies to grow. They help you feel successful and it doesn’t hurt that the rewards from your work are darn tasty. So which veggies would those be?

Super easy veggies to grow in your garden – even if you don’t know what you’re doing

peas in the garden.

peas in the garden.

  1. Peas. There are good reasons that peas are so often the vegetable of choice for teaching children about plants. Peas prefer early spring weather, and young peas can survive a light frost. They can be relatively safe from disease and insects (except for aphids), and they will tolerate most types of soil. Plus, pea greens are delicious, so you can get a lot of enjoyment from this plant.
Beans in the garden.

Beans in the garden.

  1. Beans. Beans are another classroom favorite, and many varieties of beans are easy veggies to grow. Lima beans, green snap beans (formerly known as string beans), yellow wax beans – the list goes on. Pole bean varieties do need a support trellis of some type, but this is a plant that grows quickly and can produce a lot. 
Cherry tomatoes in the garden.

Cherry tomatoes in the garden.

  1. Cherry Tomatoes. I don’t care where you go grocery shopping, there isn’t a tomato out there that’s better than one you get from your own garden. Cherry tomatoes make a great container vegetable, and one plant can produce dozens of delicious tomatoes. What’s more, you can usually find these already potted and growing with a nice little support built into the container. If you’re looking for easy veggies to grow on a patio or in a small space, cherry tomatoes are pretty easy if you make sure they stay watered.
Cucumbers in the garden.

Cucumbers in the garden.

  1. Cucumbers. First, the caveat. Cucumbers do take a little work in terms of setup. They like a nice, sunny spot and a trellis to climb, but after that? Get your plans together to make pickles because you will have more cukes than you know what to do with. 
Zucchini in the garden.

Zucchini in the garden.

  1. Zucchini. Want to know how hard it is to kill a zucchini? I put six seeds in the ground near my house, not really expecting much. A few days later, just as they were starting to sprout, someone with big heavy work boots stepped all over that part of the garden (which, admittedly, wasn’t well-marked yet). Three of the plants survived. So you can literally walk all over your zucchini and it will still grow and produce fruit. And you can eat the flowers!
Squash in the garden..

Squash in the garden.

  1. Squash. Squash comes in a multitude of varieties and it’s quite prolific. Squash also happens to grow well with beans, peas, and the deliciously edible flower, the nasturtium. Just give it lots of room or a trellis, because most varieties will walk all over your garden.
Kale in the garden.

Kale in the garden.

  1. Kale. Kale is super-nutritious, and it’s incredibly versatile in the kitchen. You can use kale in smoothies, salads, soups and stews, as a side, and you can even make kale chips. It grows easily in the spring and early summer, and if you live in the southern U.S., you can grow an additional crop in the fall. 
Lettuce in the garden.

Lettuce in the garden.

  1. Lettuce. Lettuce can grow almost anywhere, and it happens to grow especially well in that shady spot in your garden. You can harvest leaf lettuce early and often, too. 
Garlic in the garden.

Garlic in the garden.

  1. Garlic. If you have a sunny spot that stays relatively dry in the winter, garlic is as easy as it gets. Plant garlic cloves (pointed end up) in the fall, come back and harvest them in the summer. And you can use the garlic scapes (stalks) in your cooking even before the garlic bulbs are ready.
Basil in the garden.

Basil in the garden.

  1. Basil. I know. The first thing you thought when you saw this was that this is supposed to be about easy veggies to grow, and basil is an herb. Here’s the thing. The real beauty of a garden is that you can walk to your backyard and harvest dinner. As tasty as those cherry tomatoes are, they really come to life when you add basil to them. Making a cold cucumber soup? Basil goes with that, too. And once your basil is established, and not overwatered, it will grow into a bush and produce leaves all summer long, and even into the fall. 

It’s true that there are plenty of not-so-easy veggies to grow, but these ten don’t take a lot of work, and they are rather forgiving of unpredictable weather and gardening mistakes. 

What veggies have you had luck with as a beginning gardener? Would you add something to this list? I’d love to read your ideas in the comments. 

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basil, bean varieties, beans, cucumbers, easy veggies to grow, garlic, garlic bulbs, green snap beans, growing vegetables, kale, leaf lettuce, lettuce, peas, pole bean varieties, spinach, tomatoes, veggies to grow, zucchini

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • Curator’s Corner
  • Introduction
  • Feature Articles

  • Growing Zones for Peas
  • Types of Pea Plants
  • Classifications of Pea Plants
  • Choosing to Grow Peas from Seeds or Seedlings
  • Growing Peas in Open Land, in Containers, or in Raised Beds
  • Starting with the Right Soil for Your Pea Plants
  • The Right Sunlight for Your Peas
  • Should You Fertilize Your Pea Plants?
  • How—and When—to Water Your Pea Plants
  • How to Spot, Treat, and Prevent Pea-Plant Diseases
  • Pea Aphanomyces Root Rot: How to Identify, Treat, and Prevent
  • What to Do About Pests that Can Harm Your Pea Plants
  • The Right Way to Weed Your Pea Garden
  • A Word About Harvesting Peas
  • Essential Tools and Equipment for Growing and Enjoying Peas
  • Why Are My Pea Plants Turning Yellow?
  • The Best Way to Plant Peas (and 3 of the Best Peas to Grow)
  • Plant Profiles

  • Super Sugar Snap Peas
  • Sugar Ann Peas
  • Avalanche Peas
  • Snowbird Peas
  • Early Perfection Peas
  • Wando Peas
  • Recipes

  • Quinoa Confetti Salad with Sugar Snap Peas
  • Double Pea and Feta Salad
  • Lemon Garlic Shrimp with Peas and Artichokes
  • Beef with Snow Peas
  • Garlic Parmesan Sugar Snap Peas
  • Peas with Pasta
  • Sesame Snow Peas
  • Additional Articles

  • Nutrition Facts about Peas
  • Home Remedies & Health Benefits of Peas
  • Resources about Peas
  • Pea Glossary
  • Related Articles

  • 5 Vegetables You Can Grow in Hanging Baskets on a Porch
  • 15 Best Veggies to Plant in Spring for an Early Harvest
  • 10 Really Easy Veggies to Grow for New Gardeners
  • Pea Plant Pests: Identifying and Managing the Tiny Invaders
  • How to Get More Peas on Your Plant
  • The Best Peas to Plant for Snacking (Kid-Approved!)
  • The Easy Peasy Guide to Growing Pea Plants—All You Need to Know About Growing, Harvesting, Cooking, and Eating Delicious Peas

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