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Our complete cover crop collection contains nine large individual packets of Annual Buckwheat, Crimson Clover, Dutch White Clover, Hairy Vetch, Yellow Mustard, Winter Oats, Austrian Winter Pea, Daikon Driller Radish and Winter Rye seeds with instructions to grow.
These seed varieties are great for improving soil, preventing erosion, and suppressing weeds. We've included enough seed in one packet to cover an 8' x 4' garden bed. Plant winter-hardy and drought-tolerant cover crops that work well on sandy or clay soils. Improving soil health through cover crop planting is an easy and low cost way of maintaining your garden from year to year.
I was introduced to Sow Right Seeds by the March 20, 2024 episode of the No-Till Market Garden Podcast. I’ve been interested in gardening and agriculture in general for over forty years. Cover crops always sounded like a great idea—for farms and large gardens—but until that podcast episode (which I didn’t discover until recently), I had never thought that cover crops would make sense in my small garden. When I heard that Sow Right has a collection of cover crop seeds, and that each packet contains enough seeds for a 4-foot by 8-foot bed, I was sold—because I have several beds of that exact size. The All Cover Crop Collection contains nine packets. I understand that the different crops have varying requirements, but I like to experiment, so I mixed all the seeds together and then divided them up by weight into nine baggies. I sowed one bag of seeds in one of my beds on September 26, 2025. I realize that some of the cover crops will be killed this winter, but I figure that the dead plants will serve as mulch and nutrients for the surviving cover crops. At the beginning of March, I plan to crimp the cover crops and cover the bed with a tarp to kill the plants and let them start breaking down. Around mid-April, I’m going to set out my tomato plants in that bed. I won’t turn the soil first; I’ll just dig holes and set my plants right into the decayed cover crops. As for the remaining eight bags of seeds, I will sow those as crops finish in other beds. Cover crops that didn’t survive the winter will thrive at other times of the year. I’m excited because I know how beneficial cover crops are to the soil structure, my vegetables, and the soil organisms.