


You can read more about my garden journal in our tips post. I only use a few of these pages for my simple journal keeping style. There are lots of options in the freebie collection to give our readers flexibility and choice. Call me old fashioned, but I like to have a hardcopy home for notes, sketches, and somewhere to put little tidbits like packets, labels, garden calendars, and guides. My journal preference is a simple folder or binder. Date sowed when you sowed the seeds (I also note roughy how many I sowed in this column e.g. Only take things to a depth where they add value to you and your garden aspirations. On this From Seed To Harvest printable you can record: Crop note down the type of vegetable or fruit. Whatever format or style you choose, if you keep it fun and interesting you’re more likely to keep it up in the long term. Use the free online planner to design a new bed or update an old one. It’s also finds and shares all other’s gardeners notes and photos about the same varieties you are growing. But go ahead, enter notes, and photos too. Are you in search of inspiration for your future garden design in 3D Explore all the amazing features of advanced and easy-to-use free garden planning tool. Our vegetable garden planner keeps your Journal up to date, so you don’t have to. Create your journal in a way that works for you. It’s a smart garden planner Journal that tracks, collects and shares. See our post on creating and keeping a garden journal for tips and ideas!

It could be as simple as some sketches and notes on what you are growing and where, or as comprehensive as a full file of your landscape plans, plantings, harvests, weather, pests, soil conditions, and more. A garden journal can be whatever you want it to be – a basic record, a quick reminder for upcoming activities, or a detailed fine-tuning tool for your specific garden.
