Skip to main content

My Little Review of Smart Gardener

My good friend introduced me to Smart Gardener via Pinterest.  The description was something along the lines of, "this site plans your garden for you."  As a new gardener, I was skeptical.  Sounds a little too good to be true, but I checked it out anyways.




At first I was enamored.  It allows for garden planning in 4 steps:

1.  Layout your garden - you are able to choose the square footage of an in-ground garden, or choose from a variety of containers/raised beds.  Cool!

2. Select your plants - this is limited by season, and you cannot mix cool weather and warm weather vegetables.  Not cool!  Varieties of vegetables are also limited if you are looking for something specific, but you can add them manually.

3. View your plan - you get a little image with your selected plants on it, plus the space they require in your garden (square footage), planting depths, seed spacing, plant dimensions, and what to plant next to each other or not (FYI: parsnips hate everyone).  They will also recommend plant layouts for you.  Cool! 

Here is what my Spring/Summer 2013 Garden Plan looks like (my layout, not the recommended one):


*You will notice on the left sidebar all the cool little infos about the Celebrity tomato plant.

4. Receive weekly To Dos:  once you are all mapped out, the system will generate your To Do list and you can add notes and start a journal for garden. Would-be-cool if I could integrate my cools and warms.

Overall, I liked Smart Gardener, but my inability to mix cool and warm veggies on one garden plan, and subsequently on the to do list, bothered me.  Lastly, I stated in my veggie preference that I wanted to grow winter squash, but the system never gave me the ability to add it.  I suspect there are ways around this or a fix, but I just haven't tinkered around enough to figure it out. 

I will be taking my little garden plan (with some tweaks) to the nursery think weekend as I go seed-starter shopping.  Updates to follow.  :-)



Comments

  1. This makes me even want to garden, and that's saying something!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Adrienne,

    Smart Gardener would like to offer your a free Smart Add On of your choice for writing a review on us. If you are interested let us know and we will add it to your account. You can reach us at support@smartgardener.com Thanks again.

    Bobby and the Smart Gardener Team

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Plant Problem #2: Peppers

My peppers are looking funkified.  I know it's a horrible picture, but I'm sure you can see those blackish spots. I'm not sure if they have picked up the previous plant herp, aka fungus, that the broccoli and cauliflower had.  Or maybe some other kind of blight?  I'm treating it with the fungicide and rolling with it.  I've come to accept the fact, long before we even started this whole gardening thing, that not every plant was going to be a winner.  If they don't make it, they don't make it.  C'est la vie.  For a dose of good news, we had our first zucchini harvest this week. I made lovely zucchini ribbons with a meat sauce for a couple lunches this week. In the background, you'll notice a zucchini accident (young one I broke while trying to trim off dead) and a pepper.  Apparently, you are supposed to remove the first peppers to encourage growth.  So I lopped him off and here's to hoping between that and the fungicide, the p...

Garden Noob's July Recap

Dear Time, Please stop moving.  Thanks, Me Hello August, or what I like to call the gateway month into Christmas.  The garden has been moving along.  I did a major cleaning this weekend of overgrowing leaves and vines, tomato suckers, and ripped out all our broccoli and cauliflower.  They had issues, let's just leave it at that. Sadly I didn't take a lot of pictures of the work I did because quite frankly, I was frantically trying to get it done before a very busy weekend.  I'm glad I did as this week has been nothing but rain, so all my freshly groomed plants can soak it all in. Our first tomatoes are starting to turn red, mostly the Romas and heirloom cherry tomatoes.  I find that I like these heirloom versions much better than the standard grocery store ones.  Go figure.  :-) Hubby also has a baby watermelon.  Watermelon are notoriously hard to grow out here, so we'll see how he does, but so far, so good. Zucchini is ...

Oh the Humanity or Things that Make Me Cry

Ok, I didn't cry, but I wanted to. We decided to start hardening our seedlings this weekend.  Basically this means putting them outside for periods of time to get them used to wind, climate, sun, whatever - the outside.  I put them on our deck's railing, since we were using our table to transplant the carrots and parsnip into pots. Side-note :  We do not expect the carrots and parsnip to make it.  Apparently, carrots and parsnips do not transplant well, but we started growing them before we knew that.  They are very spindly with fragile roots, so this doesn't surprise me one bit.  Live and learn.  But I still felt bad and wanted to give them a shot at life.  So they are in pots. Everyone was happy and healthy until about 5pm, when a storm tried to blow in.  And when I say blow, I mean blow.  Cuz this happened to my BEAUTIFUL lettuce, kale, and spinach seedlings - flop.  Dead. They were my strongest, healthiest looking seedli...