Vegetable Garden Layout Our vegetable garden at Z & Z Wodoe Enterprise LLC showcases practical, high-yield methods suited to the Cavalla River (Nuwon) floodplain. Using raised rows and crop rotation,…

Vegetable Garden Layout

Our vegetable garden at Z & Z Wodoe Enterprise LLC showcases practical, high-yield methods suited to the Cavalla River (Nuwon) floodplain. Using raised rows and crop rotation, we strengthen food security, create jobs, and build a reliable pipeline for fresh and organic produce.

Objectives

Site Overview

The garden is organized into parallel raised rows, as shown in our field photo. Beds are grouped in four rotation blocks to balance nutrients and interrupt pest cycles. Pathways allow easy access for weeding, irrigation, and harvest collection.

Bed Layout & Rotation

Each bed is approximately 1.2 m wide with 0.4 m paths. A typical production unit contains 12 beds arranged in four rotation blocks (A–D).

Bed #BlockSize (m)Season 1 CropSeason 2 CropNotes
1A (Fruiting)20 × 1.2TomatoLeafy greens (Amaranth)Stake & mulch
2A (Fruiting)20 × 1.2Sweet Pepper/ChiliCabbageNeem spray IPM
3A (Fruiting)20 × 1.2Eggplant (Bitterball)LettuceInterplant basil
4B (Leafy)20 × 1.2CabbageCarrotNetting vs. moths
5B (Leafy)20 × 1.2Kale/CollardsOnionRegular side-dress
6B (Leafy)20 × 1.2AmaranthBeetrootHarvest weekly
7C (Root)20 × 1.2OnionCowpeaKeep weed-free
8C (Root)20 × 1.2CarrotGroundnutLight, fine tilth
9C (Root)20 × 1.2BeetrootCowpeaThin to spacing
10D (Legume)20 × 1.2CowpeaTomatoFixes nitrogen
11D (Legume)20 × 1.2GroundnutPepperMulch heavily
12D (Legume)20 × 1.2Yard-long BeanEggplantTrellis support

Rotation key: A Fruiting (tomato, pepper, eggplant, cucumber) → B Leafy (cabbage, kale, amaranth) → C Root (onion, carrot, beet) → D Legume (cowpea, groundnut) → back to A. This 4-block rotation improves soil structure and reduces disease pressure.

Irrigation & Water Management

Soil Health & Fertility

Companion Planting & IPM

Planting Calendar (Liberia)

Rainy season: May–October. Dry season: November–April. Adjust by local onset of rains.

MonthKey Tasks
Jan–FebDry-season irrigation; transplant tomatoes/peppers; sow amaranth and onions.
Mar–AprPrepare beds; apply compost; sow cowpea/groundnut; set trellises.
May–JunRainy season starts; plant cabbage/kale; direct-seed carrot/beet.
Jul–AugWeed, mulch, and stake; stagger plantings for continuous harvest.
Sep–OctHarvest leafy and root crops; start nursery for dry-season tomatoes.
Nov–DecTransition to dry-season; install drip lines/tanks; plant second tomato/pepper cycle.

Harvest & Post-Harvest

Partner With Us

Support irrigation, inputs, and training that turn fertile bottomlands into year-round organic production.