Garden Soon

Vegetable Garden Design in Ohioville, PA

Garden Soon provides garden consulting in Ohioville, Beaver County — $85–$130 for an initial site visit that includes sun assessment, a layout sketch, a plant list, and timing guidance for your growing zone. Rolling rural terrain near the Ohio-Pennsylvania border. Those site conditions are what we assess first when planning any garden in Ohioville.

What we do in Ohioville

Most people who call us for garden consulting fall into one of three groups. The first tried a raised bed last year — bought the soil, built the box, planted six tomato plants — and ended up with leggy, yellowed plants that gave them maybe a dozen tomatoes by October. The second is a new homeowner who finally has a yard and wants to grow food but genuinely doesn't know where to start: which direction does the sun move, where should the beds go, what can actually grow here? The third grew up with a huge family garden, helped pick tomatoes every summer as a kid, and now wants to start their own but realizes they were never the one making the decisions. All three situations share the same core problem: a lot of enthusiasm and a real gap in the site-specific, practical knowledge that turns a patch of dirt into something productive. That gap is exactly what we help close — without making anyone feel like they should have already known this.

For Ohioville specifically: clay loam consistent with this part of Beaver County, with some variation based on whether properties are on the Ohio River terrace or on the elevated inland sections. Rural properties here have often had minimal formal lawn care — soil pH and compaction issues are the starting points for most improvement programs.

What's included

You keep everything we produce during the session. That means the layout sketch — drawn on site, with bed dimensions and plant placement — the written plant list with varieties and quantities, timing notes for your specific region, and our soil recommendations in writing. This isn't advice that evaporates when we leave. What you walk away with is a physical document you can refer back to all season, bring to a nursery, or hand off to someone helping you build the beds.

Our process — step by step

Step one is a short call before we ever come out — we want to know roughly what you're hoping to grow, whether you have existing beds or are starting from scratch, and what your site looks like. Step two is the site visit itself, which runs about an hour and a half to two hours. We walk the yard together, map the sun across different spots, look at the soil, assess drainage, talk through layout options. Step three is where it comes together: we sketch a garden plan on paper right there on site, including bed dimensions, paths, and what grows where. We build out a plant list specific to your conditions — varieties that perform in zone 6, quantities that fit your space. We go through timing in detail: what to start in March, what to wait on until after last frost, how to succession plant lettuce so you're not drowning in it one week and out of it the next. Step four is optional: a follow-up visit two to three weeks in, when you have questions that didn't exist until you started digging.

What this costs

The initial consultation ($85–$130) covers a full site visit of one and a half to two hours, sun and drainage assessment, a hand-drawn layout sketch, a written plant list with region-appropriate varieties, timing guidance for your last frost zone, and soil amendment recommendations. You walk away with documents in hand. The full garden plan with follow-up ($225–$375) includes everything in the initial consultation plus a more detailed written design plan and a second site visit two to three weeks later, when questions have had time to develop. If you've already had a consultation and just need us back for a specific issue or a season check-in, a standalone follow-up visit is $65 to $95 for an hour on site. Remote consultations — phone or video, useful for off-season planning or customers outside our regular service area — are $50 to $75 per hour. All pricing is honest and upfront; we discuss scope on the initial call before anything is scheduled.

Frequently asked questions — Vegetable Garden Design in Ohioville

Do you offer garden consulting in Ohioville?

Yes — Garden Soon provides in-person garden consulting in Ohioville. We come to your property, walk the site together, and produce a plan specific to your conditions. Call (724) 201-9484 or use the contact form to schedule.

What happens during a garden consulting visit in Ohioville?

We start by walking the yard together and mapping where direct sun actually falls through the day — that determines where beds can go and what will produce well. Rolling rural terrain near the Ohio-Pennsylvania border. From there we sketch a layout on paper during the visit and put together a written plant list matched to your conditions and what you want to grow in Ohioville.

When is the best time of year to schedule a consultation?

Late winter and early spring — January through March — is the best window, because that timing lets us build your plan before the season starts rather than catching up to it. In western Pennsylvania, cool-season crops like lettuce, spinach, and peas can go in the ground in March, so planning in February gives you time to act on what we put together. We also do consultations in fall for customers who want to plan ahead and get beds prepped before winter.

Can you help me figure out what will grow in a shady yard?

We can, and a site assessment is especially useful in shady yards because 'shady' covers a lot of ground — there's a real difference between four hours of morning sun and four hours of afternoon sun, and between consistent shade and dappled light. Leafy greens, herbs like parsley and cilantro, and crops like kale and chard can manage on four to five hours. Tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers need six or more and won't perform well in true shade, and we'll tell you that honestly rather than set you up for disappointment.

What if I already have raised beds — can you still help?

Absolutely — existing beds are a great starting point, and a lot of what we do is working with what's already there rather than starting from scratch. We'd look at what soil is in the beds, how they're draining, whether they're placed in the best sun for what you want to grow, and how to set up a planting plan that actually uses the space well. Sometimes minor adjustments to placement, soil mix, or crop selection make a big difference in what those beds produce.

The lawn around your garden matters too

Customers who invest in getting their garden right tend to look up at some point and notice the lawn around it. It's a natural progression — once you've thought carefully about soil health, sun exposure, and what's actually growing versus what should be, the surrounding turf starts to look like the same conversation. Weed pressure from the lawn migrates into beds. Compacted soil in the yard affects drainage near the garden. The same attention to soil pH and fertility that helps a vegetable garden also applies to the twenty feet of grass around it.

Lawn Care in Ohioville

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Garden Soon

Licensed & insured in PA · Rated 4.8★ on Google

Providing Vegetable Garden Design in Ohioville, PA and surrounding areas.

Garden Soon
120 Trinity Dr, Aliquippa, PA 15001
(724) 201-9484
gardensoon@gardensoon.com
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