Let’s talk about what to plant in a victory garden. The victory garden once played a vital role in our nation, helping feed millions of Americans at home and those fighting overseas. After WWII ended, the government didn’t see much need for them anymore, and they slowly began to die out.
Yet, a few Americans still carried on with them, some even to this day. Your grandmother or grandfather may have been one of them and passed their love for gardening down to you.
What to Plant in a Victory Garden
There’s also the chance that you may not even know what a victory garden is, but could be interested in getting one started if you understand the whys and hows. After all, we’re facing tough times once again, and planting a victory garden is something I’d strongly encourage. I’ll share with you their history, several interesting facts about them, and what you need to plant in your very own victory garden.

History of the Victory Garden
Victory Gardens have been around with us for well over 100 years. They were first introduced and promoted during WWI, but were especially important during WWII. During this time, they were referred to as “war gardens.”
These gardens were a way for every American citizen to help the war effort and ensure there wouldn’t be a food shortage during those challenging times. It was certainly a morale booster, in which every civilian felt they had an important role to play.
People would plant these gardens in vacant lots, city parks, playgrounds, churchyards, and often in their own backyards. Some U.S citizens took it a step further and even plowed up their front lawns to help contribute to the food supply.
They played a key role in ensuring that everyone on the home front and the soldiers fighting overseas had plenty of food.
Fun Facts
- In 1943, there were over 20 million gardens scattered throughout the country, producing as much as 8 million tons of food.
- In Golden Gate Park alone, there were over 800 victory gardens growing vegetables.
- During WWII, victory gardens provided 41% of all the vegetables consumed in the United States. That’s huge!
- Even Eleanor Roosevelt, who went against what the Department of Agriculture advised, planted her own victory garden in the White House lawn.
Victory Gardens Today

Victory gardens were more than just about feeding people. They were viewed as a way for Americans to stop relying on others for their food supply. That was a big deal, and something we certainly need to do better today.
It also allowed Americans to get their hands dirty by returning them to a more natural way of living and providing for their families while working alongside one another in a community.
- We may not currently be experiencing a wartime scenario, but recent events have certainly underscored our country’s need for victory gardens.
- For starters, the recent pandemic depleted our local grocery store shelves, making it more challenging to go in and get what you came for.
- Most meat aisles are still nowhere near appropriate stock levels, as are many other goods we plan to purchase.
- So it only makes sense that we plant our own victory gardens to help stretch our nation’s food supply during these trying times.
What to Plant in Your Victory Garden

A victory garden should include fruits and vegetables that are easier to grow, ensuring fresh produce is planted for harvest during their appropriate growing seasons, along with root and hardier crops that can be stored throughout the winter.
Here’s what you could be planting during certain times of the year to keep your victory garden flourishing up until the first snowflake.
Springtime Garden
Spring gardens should include vegetables such as lettuce, carrots, onions, peas, radishes, and kale. These are all vegetables that do extremely well during cooler conditions. Click on whichever link above interests you for more details on how to plant and maintain these various vegetable crops.
Summertime Garden
You can still grow a number of the vegetables I’ve already mentioned in your summer garden, but be aware that they become more difficult to grow because they prefer cooler temperatures.
Summertime garden vegetables to consider include corn, beans, peppers, eggplants, basil, cucumbers, tomatoes, pumpkins, muskmelons, watermelon, and summer and winter squash.
Fall and Winter Garden
For your fall and wintertime garden, many of the vegetables that you planted during your spring garden, you’ll notice, are fairly similar. Consider planting carrots, lettuce, radishes, as you did in the spring, along with broccoli, cauliflower, beets, cabbage, spinach, parsley, parsnips, and turnips in your victory garden.
There’s even Swiss chard, Kohlrabi, and kale that are also extremely easy to grow, though they’re not as often talked about.
Why Families Are Planting Victory Gardens Now
With rising food costs and a growing interest in self-sufficiency, more families than ever are turning to backyard and container gardening. A victory garden gives kids hands-on experience with where food comes from, reduces trips to the grocery store, and can meaningfully cut your household food budget over a single growing season. It also gets the whole family outside and working toward a shared goal.
Choosing the Right Location for Your Garden
Sunlight is the single most important factor when choosing where to plant. Most vegetables need six to eight hours of direct sun per day. Walk your yard or outdoor space at different times of day and observe where sunlight falls for the longest time. Avoid spots near large trees that cast shade or compete for nutrients. If you’re limited on space, a south-facing patio or balcony with containers works well for many crops.
Starting Small and Scaling Up
One of the most common beginner mistakes is planting too much too soon. Start with a four-by-four or four-by-eight raised bed, or four to six large containers. This is manageable for a busy family and gives you room to learn without becoming overwhelmed. You can always expand next season once you know what works in your climate and soil.
The Best Vegetables for First-Time Victory Gardeners
Some vegetables are much easier to grow than others. For beginners, stick with crops that are forgiving and fast-producing. Zucchini, bush beans, leaf lettuce, radishes, cherry tomatoes, and cucumbers are all excellent choices. Herbs like basil, chives, and parsley are also simple to grow and add a lot to home-cooked meals. Avoid starting with notoriously tricky crops like corn, melons, or artichokes until you have a season or two under your belt.
Understanding Your Soil
Healthy soil is the foundation of any productive garden. Purchase a basic soil test kit from a garden center to check your soil’s pH and nutrient levels. Most vegetables thrive in slightly acidic to neutral soil, with a pH of around 6.0 to 7.0. If you’re starting a raised bed, fill it with a mix of topsoil, compost, and aged manure for a nutrient-rich growing environment. Adding compost each season keeps the soil productive year after year.
Planting from Seed vs. Buying Transplants
Seeds are less expensive and offer more variety, but they require more time and attention early on. Transplants are young plants already started for you at a nursery, and they’re a great option for families just getting started. A good middle-ground approach is to buy tomato, pepper, and herb transplants while starting faster crops like beans, cucumbers, and radishes directly from seed in the ground.
How to Water a Victory Garden
Consistent moisture is key to healthy vegetables. Most gardens need about one inch of water per week, either from rainfall or irrigation. Water deeply and less frequently rather than a little every day, which encourages roots to grow deeper into the soil. Morning watering is ideal because it gives foliage time to dry before evening, reducing the risk of fungal disease. A simple soaker hose or drip system makes watering efficient and easy to maintain.
Getting Kids Involved in the Garden
A family victory garden is a perfect opportunity to teach children responsibility, patience, and where food actually comes from. Give each child their own small plot or container to take care of. Let them choose one or two vegetables they love to eat. Kids are far more likely to eat vegetables they grew themselves, which is a meaningful bonus for picky eaters. Simple tasks like watering, weeding, and harvesting are appropriate for most ages.
Managing Weeds and Pests Naturally
Weeds compete with your vegetables for water and nutrients, so staying on top of them early makes a big difference. Mulching around your plants with straw or wood chips suppresses weeds and helps retain moisture. For pests, start with the least invasive approach. Hand-pick larger insects like tomato hornworms, use insecticidal soap spray for aphids, and attract beneficial insects like ladybugs by planting marigolds or dill nearby.
Keeping a Simple Garden Journal
Tracking what you plant, when you plant it, and how it performs takes only a few minutes a week and pays off enormously over time. Note what worked, what didn’t, when the first frost came, and which varieties your family enjoyed eating most. This record becomes your personalized guide that gets better every single season.
Harvesting and Enjoying Your Food
Most vegetables taste best when harvested young and eaten quickly. Check your garden daily once plants start producing. Zucchini can go from perfect to enormous overnight. Lettuce bolts and turns bitter if left too long in heat. Harvesting regularly also encourages plants to keep producing throughout the season. The moment your family sits down to a meal made entirely from your own garden is one you’ll remember for a long time.
Making Your Victory Garden a Yearly Tradition
Starting a victory garden is a commitment that rewards you more each year. Your soil improves, your skills sharpen, and your family develops a rhythm that makes the whole process feel natural. Many families find that what begins as a small backyard experiment grows into one of their most meaningful annual traditions. Plant the first seed this season, and you may be surprised how far it takes you.
Please Check Out What To Plant Each Month:
- What To Plant In January
- What To Plant In February
- What To Plant In March
- What To Plant In April
- What To Plant In May
- What To Plant In June
- What To Plant In July
- What To Plant In August
- What To Plant In September
- What To Plant In October
Final Word
It’s a great feeling not having to rely so much on others for your every need, and gardening is one way to do that. It also gives you the opportunity to get out of the house.
Now that you have the knowledge regarding what to plant, you can get started and “Dig for Victory” in your very own victory garden. And remember that you don’t have to confine yourself to one growing season.
If you’re already a faithful gardener, what do you find to be the most successful vegetable crop that you and your family enjoy to grow each year? What would you choose when it comes to what to plant in a victory garden? Please keep prepping, we must. May God bless this world, Linda
Copyright Images: Vegetables Deposit photos_25388211_s-2019, Garden Woman with Cucumber Deposit photos_5050434_s-2019, Garden Vegetables for Soup Deposit photos_78146246_s-2019
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