After which vegetables you can’t plant radishes: secrets of a good harvest

14.03.2023 17:01

Radish is a cold-resistant but light-loving plant, which must be taken into account when choosing a planting site.

Early varieties yield a harvest by the end of June. Radish loves any soil, but grows best on sandy loam and cultivated peat soils.

However, what crop grew before the radish plays a big role. There are plants after which the harvest will be meager.

After which vegetables should you not plant radishes?

Before sowing root crops, you need to make sure that cabbage, carrots, radishes, beets, turnips, watercress, or horseradish did not grow in the selected bed a year ago.

These crops suffer from the same diseases and pests. When sowing radishes, preference is given to beds where legumes (beans, peas, peanuts), melons (pumpkin, watermelon, melon), nightshades (eggplant, tomatoes, potatoes) were previously grown.

Radish
Photo: Pixabay

Radish grows well after corn, dill, onions. Thus, radish can be planted after most crops popular among summer residents.

Author: Dmitry Bobrovich Internet resource editor