
Every year, gardeners experiment and swap plants to create crop rotation. Proper rotation of plants on a plot will not only preserve the harvest, but also increase it.
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However, not all plants are ready to get along with each other. Some crops planted this season may affect next year's harvest.
Yes, certain plants cannot be planted in the same place year after year. Crops of the same species greatly deplete the soil, extracting useful trace elements from it.
Therefore, the solution is simple duty rotation, but it also needs to be carried out correctly.
What affects cabbage yield?
Some gardeners blame poor crop yields on bad weather, diseases, or pests.
However, not everything is so clear-cut, and the main mistake may be failure to follow the order of planting plants in one bed.
Yes, cabbage will grow tasteless and dry, and will set small heads if daikon, radish, or horseradish previously grew in this bed.
Cabbage will be sick for a long time, will grow crooked and lopsided if zucchini and pumpkins previously grew in this place.
Cabbage heads will not grow well and will not store well if the plant is planted where turnips grew. When planting cabbage after turnips, you need to know that it can be attacked by hordes of pests.