• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • How to Garden
    • Garden Pests
    • Plant Diseases
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Seed Starting
    • Tools & Equipment
  • Plants
    • Plant Profiles
    • Vegetables
    • Fruit
    • Herbs
  • Recipes
    • Canning and Food Preservation
  • Books & Classes
    • Herbalism Classes
    • Books for Christian Herbalists
  • About
    • Privacy Policy

Seed Inventory Complete

January 17, 2017 by Jeanne

I spent time this past weekend completing my seed inventory. What is a seed inventory? If you’ve been gardening for a while, you tend to collect a lot of half-full seed packages. Although my garden is big, I don’t use all the seeds that I buy each season. Instead, I save them for the next year.

The problem? I usually forget what I have, buy too much of what I don’t need, and find myself scrambling to locate specific varieties when the season is already underway and local garden centers are sold out.

Taking a Seed Inventory

A seed inventory is simply a count of what you have on hand and a list of what you need. I take my seed inventory by first mapping out what I plan to plant in the vegetable garden. Here is my list for 2017:

Spring

  • Lettuce – red leaf, mixes
  • Swiss Chard – rainbow mix “Bright Lights”
  • Broccoli Rabe
  • Radishes
  • Peas – Lincoln, our favorite variety
  • Beets – Detroit Dark Red
  • Onions – sweet
  • Carrots – Scarlet Nantes and Nantes Half-Long
  • Parsnips

Late Spring – Summer

  • Tomatoes – Beefsteak, Early Girl, Roma/Plum types, Sweet 100s (cherry).
  • Peppers – just four plants this year since we always have too many.
  • Green Beans – Blue Lake (our favorite variety, a bush type).
  • Sweet Potatoes – slips (starter plants) for “Beauregard”
  • Zucchini, squash
  • Cucumbers

Fall

  • Broccoli
  • Cabbage
  • Cauliflower
  • Lettuce
  • Garlic – Elephant type

Herbs

We have many herb plants but need more. This is a list of what I plan to grow, including some we already have.

  • Sage
  • Rosemary
  • Sweet Basil
  • Holy Basil (tulsi)
  • Cinnamon Basil
  • Parsley
  • Applemint
  • Mint
  • Spearmint
  • Clary Sage
  • Thyme
  • Lemon Balm
  • Chives
  • Stevia
  • Catnip
  • Lavender
  • Oregano
  • Dill
  • Calendula

On the list of herbs, above, I have all except for the basils, dill, and parsley. I do need more lemon balm, however, since the plants I have seem to be struggling.

Fruit

We already have an extensive orchard of apple, pear, plum, peach, nectarine, apricot, and cherry trees. Only the apples, peaches, and pears have produced fruit so far. I also have a raised garden bed filled with strawberries, which I make into jam.

I still have my heart set on a fig tree if I can convince my husband that there are varieties that do not need coddling. I also want to try my hand at growing blueberries in containers on the back deck, as well as adding an elderberry plant on the forest edge for medicinal foods.

Now that I’ve listed everything I want to grow, I compare the seeds in my stash with what I plan to grow. I found that I have everything except carrots, dill, parsley, basil, lemon balm, and sweet potatoes. Some of the plants, such as the tomatoes, I will buy at the garden center. They can grow stronger, healthier starter plants than I can in my cool basement seed starting area.

By creating this list and being thoughtful and careful in my planning, I’ll be sure to have exactly what I need on hand to start my garden in a few short weeks – six, to be exact! I can start weeding in March, and plant the first lettuce, peas and radishes around St. Patrick’s Day if the weather cooperates.

Another great reason for making a seed inventory and planning a garden is that you can make sure you have space for everything. As I map out the garden beds, it’s important to me to rotate where I plant my vegetables to outwit the bugs and diseases. I’ll also need to erect the pea trellis to support my peas and get frames ready for row covers to keep the bugs off the squash plants.

Now is the time to do your garden planning – and dreaming. Have fun. This is the kind of “work” you can do at the kitchen table with a cup of coffee or tea at hand and a fun way to start your garden year.

 

Filed Under: Seed Starting

Previous Post: « How to Roast Chestnuts
Next Post: An Edible Front Yard »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Blueberry

    January 25, 2017 at

    Some of the new varieties of blueberries coming from Florida have less than 100 chill hours and can be grown in a greenhouse to produce two crops in a year.

Footer

oatmeal muffins in the tin, just out of the oven

Easy Oatmeal Muffin Recipe

This easy oatmeal muffin recipe makes a tasty breakfast, tea-time treat, or snack. It’s a plain, unassuming, honest muffin: no dripping sweetness, no sugary topping. The freshly cooked old-fashioned oatmeal keeps the batter moist. If you do not overbake them (as I have done in the past), they retain this moist, fluffy texture. No, they…

Read More

a blue borage herb flower

How to Start Herb Seeds the Right Way: Free Course

Learn how to start herb seeds the right way with The Herbal Academy’s new, FREE online course! Home Garden Joy is an Herbal Academy affiliate. We love their ebooks and courses. I’ve taken many of them and found them to be very helpful. They get to the heart of herbalism without introducing spiritual aspects in…

Read More

raised bed garden

How to Prepare Raised Beds for Spring Planting

The snow and ice have finally melted. In the mornings when I walk my dog through our farm, I can hear a rooster crowing on a neighboring farm. Cardinals have begun singing in the dawn. It’s spring, folks. And while the calendar reminds me we can still feel winter’s icy breath, spring planting is just…

Read More

two loaves of bread in the oven

Swedish Tea Bread

I first made Swedish tea bread for my 50th birthday. Three of my friends have birthdays in the same month and invited me to their family group birthday celebration (they are all relatives). I shaped the bread into braided rings and decorated it with sliced almonds. It was a hit, and I have made it…

Read More

  • About
  • Plant a Row for the Hungry
  • My Books on Amazon
  • Awards
  • Privacy Policy

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Substack
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2026 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme