Three Sisters Garden ” How to Plant Corn, Squash & Beans Together
Revered by Native Americans, corn, squash, and beans are known as the three sisters when planted together.
Three Sisters Garden ” How to Plant Corn, Squash & Beans Together
Revered by Native Americans, corn, squash, and beans are known as the three sisters when planted together.
Prior to European settlement in North America, many Native American groups grew three of their most important crops – corn, beans, and squash – all in one big jumbled bed. It was an elegant jumble, if not ingenious, as each crop fits together like a puzzle piece with its neighbors. This type of companion planting is now known as a three sisters garden.
How the Three Sisters Garden Works Together
Cornstalks act as a trellis for the beans (the plant’s thin tendrils don’t get in the way of the growing ears). The beans, like most legumes, have a quasi-magical ability to take nitrogen from the air, where it is abundant, and convert it into a soil-bound form that is useful to other plants. This process, known as nitrogen-fixation, is especially useful to corn, which requires large quantities of the nutrient. Lastly, squash plants grow low and wide around the corn and beans, their huge leaves carpeting the ground and preventing both weed growth and evaporation of soil moisture.
This traditional triad, popularly known as a three sisters planting, was central to the diet of many Native American tribes, who ascribed great cultural, even spiritual, significance to the relationship between the species. Modern-day nutritionists ascribe another significance: eaten together, corn and beans have all the amino acids of a complete protein, making an ideal vegetarian meal. The squash adds extra minerals and vitamins, plus a touch of sweetness.
Choosing the Right Varieties of the Three Sisters
Here are criteria for choosing varieties of each crop that are suitable for a three sisters garden:
Corn: Traditionally, grain corn was used (the kind you would use for cornbread or tortillas), but three sisters planting also works with sweet corn. One caveat: Some modern corn varieties are fairly short, which results in the stalks being overwhelmed by the bean vines, so be sure to pick a variety that matures to at least six feet in height, the taller the better.
Beans: Traditionally, the beans in a three sisters garden were the kind meant to be dried and stored for later use, but green beans for fresh eating are also an option. They must be “pole” beans (vine-type), however, as modern “bush” beans are incapable of climbing cornstalks.
Squash: The only requirement here is that you use a winter squash variety – butternut, acorn, delicata, and the like – which grow on vines that spread across the ground (these ripen in autumn, but are called winter squash because their tough outer rind allows them to keep through the winter months). Summer squash varieties (such as crookneck and pattypan varieties) won’t work because they grow in single clumps, rather than as a spreading groundcover.
How to Plant a Three Sisters Garden
There is no one right way to do a three sisters planting. Ultimately, you’ll probably need a bit of trial and error over several seasons to perfect a process that works in your climate and with the particular varieties you want to use.
The key is coming up with the right spatial configuration and the right timing for sowing each type of seed. The steps below outline the general process and principles. Note that all three crops require warm weather and will shrivel up at the slightest sign of frost. Plant them only once you are certain the weather has warmed up for good.
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If I only have enough space for one mound, will there be enough corn for adequate wind pollination or will I need to hand pollinate the corn?
Last year (Doing my first 3 sisters experiment) I planted my corn in 4 rows 20′ long, once the corn was about a foot tall, in went the beans. I planted Blue Hubbard at the opposite end of the garden. Everything went fairly well, Corn grew to 11′ tall some of the stalks produced 3 ears one had 4 ears, beans did indeed climb the corn but produced fairly sparse beans per vine.(Enough for a few meals and seed for next planting)…. Then there was the squash (only 1 plant). Holy Moses the smallest was 16lb the largest 30lb, vine… Read more »
Instead of doing a mound circle, can you plant everything in rows?
This was a great article as it explained how and why to grow the three sisters. Thanks very much appreciated!
I seem to recall reading somewhere that the contribution of the squash to the arrangement was to protect the corn and beans from deer, because deer do not like it when the large, hairy squash leaves brush against their legs. I’ve experienced the same thing while wearing shorts and trying tiptoe through the squash vines, so it makes sense.
I am new to farming and I like to do companion planting and intercroping
want to know if sweet potato and sweet water melon can be a companion for planting
Lovely suggestions
sucks