Planning Your Garden in January

Winter lingers on, but January presents an ideal opportunity to begin your garden planning. Here are some straightforward, effective tips for organizing your garden in January, setting you up for success before spring unfolds.

1. Review Last Year’s Garden

Start by thinking about your garden last year. If needed, write down your highs and lows in a notebook. Consider answering the following questions to help you avoid mistakes and produce a higher yield .

  • What grew well?
  • What areas of your garden struggled? Did you have unwanted pests? Was your garden in too much shade? Did you experience drought due to an inadequate watering system?
  • Also think about what you planted. At harvest, did you wish you had more tomatoes, cucumbers, green beans, etc.? Or do you wish you had planted herbs or cut flowers?

2. Map Your Garden Space

Do you plan to use the same set up as last year? January is ideal for paper planning your garden. Use graph paper of free online garden planners to help plan this year’s set up.

  • Sketch your entire yard include fruit trees, garden areas, and raised beds.
  • Mark sunny vs. shady areas for expanding your
  • Note down slopes, wet spots, and wind patterns.growing space.
  • Decide where you want veggies, flowers, herbs, or pollinator plants.
  • Plan new raised beds
  • Consider trellises, fencing, or drip irrigation
  • Sketch where you’d like perennial additions like berry bushes or fruit trees.

3. Choose What You Want to Grow

Start with your goals for this year’s garden. What do you want to process, freeze, or dehydrate this year? Or do you want to plant a flower garden to help pollinators?

  • Food Garden: What do you want to eat? Consider tomatoes, beans, zucchini, salad greens, potatoes, berries, beets, or other root vegetables.
  • Cut-Flower Garden: Consider planting zinnias, dahlias, cosmos, or sunflowers.
  • Pollinator Garden: Try planting coneflower, bee balm, milkweed, or asters.
  • Herb Garden: Common herbs to plant are basil, oregano, chives, parsley, thyme, or mint. (If you are like me, I plant catnip for my cats).

Next check all the information for successful growth, including:

  • Days to maturity
  • Space needed for successful growth. Concentrate on the type of plants. Do the plants need space for extended vine growth? Do the plants get taller than others? How much root depth is required for growth?
  • Sunlight requirements for every section of your garden.

4. Learn Your Frost Dates to Create a Planting Calendar

For example, in Michigan, the last frost is around early–mid May.
Use that date to determine plant times for every part of your garden. Count backward for indoor start times for plants that take longer to mature.

5. Order Seeds Early

January is a great time to order your seeds. Many companies still offer print catalogs to explore your best options which gives you a chance to compare prices. Remember popular varieties sell out fast.

6. Plan for Crop Rotation

Rotate your crops for crucial soil health. For example, do not put tomatoes where tomatoes were last year.Rotate heavy feeders (tomatoes, corn) with nitrogen fixers (beans, peas) or light feeders. Rotating helps prevent disease buildup and improves yields.

7. Create an Inventory of Your Supplies

Before spring rush, inventory your current gardening supplies. Creating an inventory early gives you a chance to replace broken or purchase new supplies.

  • Check your seed trays
  • Inspect grow lights
  • Clean pots
  • Make sure you have potting mix, labels, and tools

8. Improve Soil

Even during the winter months, you can work to improve your soil. If the ground is not frozen solid, add compost to beds. Cover empty beds with leaves or cardboard to help suppress the weeds

If frozen,start composting indoors. Save kitchen scraps in a bucket for spring. Next, plan any raised beds or soil amendments you want to add.

9. Think About Pollinators

Plan to attract beneficial insects to your garden to increase pollination, include:

  • Early bloomers like Crocus or Hyacinths
  • Mid-summer pollinator flowers like Bee Balm or Echinacea
  • Late-season nectar sources (asters, goldenrod)

Pollinator-friendly gardens reduce pests naturally.

10. Learn A New Skill

Is there something new you would like to add to your garden this season? January is perfect time to learn a new skill or gardening technique. Check out a variety of different resources.

  • Garden Books: If you do not already have one, sign up for a library card. Check out books for free. Your local librarian is a valuable resource with the ability to get you books from other libraries.
  • YouTube Channels: Search gardening tips on YouTube for inspiration.
  • College Extension Classes: Many colleges offer weekend seminars, conferences, or gardening guides for a low entry fee.

Remember, have fun! Happy planning! Enjoy your garden!

How to Make a Christmas Organization Notebook

Staying organized during the holiday season is essential. Making a Christmas organization notebook is one of the best ways to keep all your information in one place. Fill the pages with Christmas card lists, recipes, gift ideas, grocery lists, receipts, and much more.

I begin the Christmas Organization Notebook by decorating. When I write out my lists or tape return addresses inside to use later, I want a festive and fun covering. Make the notebook part of your holiday crafts.

Making a Christmas Organization Notebook

Each Christmas Organization Notebook is a personal process. Decorate or leave plain, the choice is up to you. The idea of the notebook is convenience. When you are sipping your morning coffee, you can glance through the notebook to add or cross off items. I leave mine on the end table. When I am relaxing in the evening, I write down what I would like to accomplish the following day. Or add to lists that I need to finish before Christmas gatherings.

Materials I Used:

  • Christmas Cloth (I buy the pre-cut pieces at Wal-Mart. At $1.47, the price is right for simple crafts.)
  • Composition Notebook (I love these notebooks. They are inexpensive with a sturdy cover.)
  • Construction Paper
  • An Envelope ( I actually used an old one)
  • Scissors
  • Marker
  • Embleshiment
  • Hot-Glue Gun

The basic materials for your Christmas Organization Notebook

Measure and cut the cloth to fit around the notebook. Leave room to fold the fabric over to glue down.

Cut the fabric piece to fit around your notebook

Before gluing the fabric down on the inside, cover the inside with construction paper. This step is optional. I like using the green and red construction paper to add to the Christmas theme.

Construction paper covers up the inside information.

Next, begin gluing. Before careful, the contents are hot. There is a reason for the name hot glue gun. When folding the fabric over to glue, you will need to cut the middle to allow the cloth to lay flat.

Next, glue the envelope in the back. I like having one place for all my shopping receipts. Placing them in the envelope, allows me to keep track of spending. I have the receipts on hand in case I need to return anything.

An envelope for the receipts.

Finally, add your embellishments. Since my fabric had snowflakes, I added a large snowflake to front of my Christmas Organization Notebook. I wrote in the year. I keep my notebooks as resources for the following year.

 

I record my purchases in the notebook. I can look back to see what I bought each person on my list. This way I know I do not purchase similar items the following year.