All About Growing Grains at Home

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by Adobestock/Andris Tkachenko

Growing grains at home–including buckwheat, corn, pearl millet, hulless oats and sunflowers–works in most regions. This guide shows how to grow grains at home. (For details on growing many other vegetables and fruits, visit our Crop at a Glance collection page.)

A satisfying variety of grain crops can be grown during the summer months to provide staple foods for people and animals, without the pesticide residues that commonly plague store-bought grain products. Corn has high levels of protein and other nutrients, and pearl millet and hulless oats are easier to harvest and thresh compared with many other grains. The blossoms from sunflower and buckwheat plants provide nectar and pollen for important beneficial insects, and you can eat the seeds or use them to feed chickens and other birds.

Types of Summer Grain Crops to Try for Growing Grains at Home

The following warm-season grain crops thrive in a wide range of climates, are easy to store, and have nutritional profiles that make them nourishing staples for people and poultry alike.

  • Updated on May 30, 2023
  • Originally Published on Sep 11, 2013
Tagged with: ancient grains, Barbara Pleasant, buckwheat, grains, millet, Sunflowers
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