Thriving Garden Planner - from Thriving the Future
How many potatoes do you need to plant to feed your family from your garden?
Times are tough and food prices are through the roof. And they are signaling about another pandemic.
You need to grow your own food. It's not too late to start.
How much food can I grow per person to use my garden as my primary food source?
- How much space will I need for potatoes or lettuce or ?
- How many plants, bulbs, or seeds will I need?
- When the season is done - How much money did I save by growing my own fresh food?
The Thriving Garden Planner from Thriving the Future helps you answer those questions.
Put in the number of people to plan for and it tells you how much total space you need for those potatoes or tomatoes, and how many plant starts or seeds that you need to buy at the store.
Then at the end of the year, how much did I save by growing my own food?
Last year I saved $236, and it wasn't even a great year.
Do all this:
- Log all of your plantings, trees, bushes, perennials, and annual garden plants. When, What type, Where, How, From (source), and the outcome.
- Track how many tomatoes or plants that you harvested and when. How many did the front garden yield vs. the back garden?
- A way to track your inputs (how much compost or wood chips did you add?).
- Log your first and lost frost dates for the year, so you can compare them to the average and what happened in previous years.
- Track any plant sales you made at the farmer's market or online.
- See your food costs. How much of your grocery bill did you save by growing your own fresh food?
- Thriving Garden Planner puts it all in a spreadsheet for you (so you don't have to!). And you can update it with your own info.
What this means to you: You can put this all together and know how much of your food bill you saved by growing your own food. Did it really only yield that tomato that the scoffers say cost you $25?
Example: I harvested 104 Amish Paste and Pineapple tomatoes, equaling 38 pounds of tomatoes, in 2021.
At the store, heirloom tomatoes are $3.49/pound. So I grew the equivalent of $132 in tomatoes in one season, saving my food bill by growing it myself.
Plant trees, Grow your own food, and Tend your livestock. You can track all those in this planner.
Name your own price and get it now!
The Thriving Garden Planner plus a copy of my planner from last year to use as an example guide.