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Companion Planting 

Companion planting involves grouping garden plants together so that they help each other to grow better. They can do this in many different ways, such as:

 

Spreadsheet

Detailed chart showing companion planting for fruits, flowers, herbs and vegetables

Choosing companion plants

Working out which plants grow well together is often a matter of individual trial and error, but Yates seed packets have recently been re-vamped with the addition of lots of extra information, including recommendations for herb and vegetable companion planting. Here are some favourites: pumpkin loves corn, beans and radish; cabbages love beans, celery and onions; beetroot loves broccoli, lettuce and onions.

 

For a full list of companion plants, you can download the Yates Companion Planting Guide

and a different one here: http://onecreativemommy.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Planning-the-Garden-What-to-Plant-Together.pdf 

Plants that attract beneficial insects

Planting a mixture of flowers and herbs among vegies and fruit trees will encourage a healthy diversity of living creatures to move into the garden. Insect-attracting plants that grow readily from seed include herbs like thyme, sage, coriander, chives and mint, and flowers such as cosmos, calendula, lavender, echinacea and marigold.

Phacelia, available in Yates seed range, is very successful at attracting useful garden insects such as bees (valuable pollinators) and hoverflies (aphid predators). Phacelia’s appealing lavender-blue flowers produce copious quantities of pollen and nectar that make them irresistible to many insects.

Masking and decoy plants

Masking plants emit an odour that disguises the smell of desirable plants and confuses the insect pests that might otherwise attack them. A good example is planting chives, onions or garlic near roses to deter thrips, aphids and other pests.

Closely related to the masking plants are the ‘decoy’ plants that attract pests to themselves and away from their neighbours. Nasturtium is one of the best known decoy plants. Nasturtiums act like magnets, pulling pests away from other plants (pictured). Plants like this are sometimes called ‘sacrificial’ or ‘martyr’ plants because they’re prepared to suffer in order to protect their companions.

Nurturing plants

Other plants improve conditions for their neighbours. The best-known of these are the peas, beans and other members of the legume family that have the ability to capture nitrogen from the atmosphere. Plants growing in close proximity to peas and beans benefit from the nitrogen the legumes have added to the soil.

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