How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (2024)

No matter how green your thumb is, the fate of your garden still hinges on a higher power. That's why, before getting into the weeds with a new flower bed or vegetable patch, it's wise to consult one of Earth's top arbiters of horticultural luck: the sun.

As in real estate, a garden's success stems largely from location. You have to pick the right plants for your climate, of course, but you also have to pick the right place to plant them. And while that's partly due to soil quality and moisture, those factors are relatively easy to manage. Sunlight exposure is a different story, especially in spaces where tall trees or buildings cast shifting patterns of shade.

Different plants need different amounts of sun — many vegetables like at least eight hours a day, and some shade-tolerant plants thrive in surprisingly dim conditions. Yet whether you want to grow sun-loving squash or low-light foamflowers, it's a good idea to seek solar guidance before you dig in. That means not just eyeballing how much light hits your yard in general, but learning more precisely where and when.

If you know the daily patterns sunlight paints across your property, you can give your plants an edge by matching each one's solar needs with a suitably lit location. (It can help with other projects, too, informing the placement of things like solar panels, windows, beehives, bat houses, fish ponds and chicken coops, to name a few).

The best way to measure sun exposure varies by garden and gardener, but even highly detailed sunlight maps shouldn't be too labor-intensive to make. Here's a look at several options, starting with one I can recommend from experience:

1. Shoot the shade.

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (1)

After years of gardening in full sun, I moved to a neighborhood with lots of huge trees in 2013. I like how they limit July heat and support native birds, but despite their benefits, tall trees also tend to throw shade on any would-be gardens below.

Enough sun shone through to preserve hope, though, so I decided to map it with an improvised process that worked pretty well. Not only was it easy, but it has since helped me find places to grow crops like tomatoes, squash, okra and cucumbers.

The only tools I used were a digital camera, a tripod and photo-editing software with layering and opacity features. (Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator are good options, but some free online photo editors work, too.) You'll also need a clear, safe vantage point for the camera, and at least one sunny day to collect data. Here are the steps:

• Set up the camera on the tripod with a good garden view. An elevated vantage point might help (I used an upstairs window), but ground level is probably fine.

• Take photos at various times of day while it's sunny, and make sure the camera's position or settings don't change, since you want each shot framed, focused and exposed the same. You could do this all in one day or spread out over several.

• You could also do it automatically — some DSLR cameras have a time-lapse or interval-timer mode, for example — but if you pick a day (or days) when you'll be home anyway, it's pretty easy to just press the shutter every hour or two.

• Try to capture a variety of sunlight patterns. You can use as few as two images, but more data means more detail. I used a photo from each hour of daylight, taken over several days, although a photo every two or three hours may be plenty. Note what time each photo was taken, either by writing it down or checking the metadata.

• Skip heavily overcast days. You don't need to avoid clouds completely, as long as there are visible sunlight patterns on the ground, but the goal is to map the effects of long-term surface features like trees, not temporary clouds or haze.

• You could stop after taking the photos, since a mix of time-stamped sunlight patterns already contains the data you want. If you're up for a little photo editing, though, a single composite image can be useful as a quick visual reference.

• To do that, upload the photos to a computer where you can edit them. Adobe Photoshop will let you open them as layers in a single document, and has an opacity tool to make them more transparent. I used Adobe Illustrator, which has similar features, but so do many other photo-editing programs.

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (3)

• Once the photos are in one file, the last steps are to reduce their opacity and stack them up. I initially turned opacity down to 15 percent for all my photos, but doing it equally like that gives more weight to images at the top of the stack. In hopes of adding balance, I went back and made each layer slightly more opaque than the one in front of it. This wasn't scientific, but it did help the lower layers shine through.

• Make sure all the photos' edges are aligned, and then you're finished.

Here's my final version:

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (4)

Sun angle varies by season, so if your gardening plans extend into fall or winter, you may want multiple sun maps for various times of year. It's also worth noting that "direct sun" doesn't mean the same thing at every latitude, since sunlight hits Earth less directly farther from the equator. And, depending on the plant, sunlight can be more valuable at certain times of day: Many tomatoes are notoriously vulnerable to fungal diseases, for instance, and a blast of early-morning sun can help by drying excess moisture from their leaves. So even if you do make a composite sun map like the one above, hang on to your original time-stamped photos, too.

2. Sketch the shade.

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (5)

If you don't want to mess with a camera or a computer, you could also just try an old-school version of the method above: drawing sunlight instead of photographing it.

Manually depicting sun exposure may be more labor-intensive than taking photos, but it's not hard labor — especially compared with actual gardening — and it might be a meditative way to spend time in your garden while honing your drawing skills.

The principles are the same either way, but if you're sketching sun maps by hand, you may want to start by making a template that represents your yard, including landscape elements for reference. Then you can make copies (either digitally or by tracing it) and draw various sunlight patterns on top of it. You could also color-code different levels of shade to add detail, or just make notes to yourself.

3. Calculate the shade.

This method has some limitations, but it is possible to calculate shadow length based on the sun's altitude angle and the height of whatever's blocking it. In short, shadow length (L) equals the height of the obstruction (h) divided by the tangent (tan) of the sun's altitude angle (a), as this illustration shows:

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (6)

This tells you the length of a shadow, but it may be impractical in a space with lots of trees. Still, it's simpler than it sounds, and it warrants at least a mention in this list. If you try it, this tool from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration can tell you the sun's altitude angle. There are also a number of phone apps that can help you calculate tree height. From there, you can use the tangent function on a scientific calculator. If a tree is 40 feet tall and the midday sun angle is 60 degrees, for example, the tree's shadow would be 23 feet long at noon.

4. Model the shade.

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (7)

Of course, you could just let the internet do the math for you. Several online tools map the sun's path by date and location, including SunCalc and Sollumis, both of which use Google Maps. The University of Oregon's Solar Radiation Monitoring Lab also has a sun-tracking tool, displaying the data in a chart rather than an overhead map. Another option, FindMyShadow, not only calculates the sun's position and height for any place and time, but also has a scene-drawing tool where you can draw, move, resize and rotate objects to see how they cast shade during the day.

And for a slightly fancier take on this concept, you could also model your property's solar profile in SketchUp. There are several options for doing this, but Australian permaculture consultant and Milkwood school director Nick Ritar recommends DeltaCodes' Shadow Analysis plug-in. Here's a YouTube demo of that one:

5. Buy something.

Some mobile apps also offer sun-tracking services, including FindMyShadow, Sun Surveyor and Sun Seeker, which range in price from $2 to $15.

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (8)

There are also physical tools you can buy to measure sunlight exposure directly — although some garden enthusiasts raise doubts about their horticultural value. These include relatively cheap "sunlight calculators" that measure solar radiation at a single spot or more sophisticated — and often expensive — devices like the Solar Pathfinder (pictured), which uses a reflective dome to record insolation data without electricity.

These are just a few ideas for shedding light on sun exposure. If your sunlight map offers dismal prospects for sun-loving vegetables, it couldn't hurt to experiment a little anyway. Many crops can adapt to less than ideal conditions, so it may be worth trying a few different locations to see which works best.

However you enlighten yourself, remember light is only part of the equation, along with other factors like soil chemistry and moisture. It's wise to test your soil before planting, and to follow a deliberate watering strategy for every plant you grow.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How do you find your sun path?

    The easiest way to find your sun path is to plug your date and location into an online tool that does the math for you. SunCalc, Sollumis, the University of Oregon's Solar Radiation Monitoring Lab, and FindMyShadow are some simple resources that do all the work.

  • Does your garden get more sun in the summer?

    Sun angle varies by season. In the summer, it's much higher in the sky (not to mention hotter), meaning your garden will get more sun than in the winter. When making a sun map, it's important to do so in the summer—or whenever you plan to do your gardening.

  • Which direction does your garden face?

    The direction—or "aspect"—of your garden is the direction it faces in relation to your house. So, if you stand with your back to the wall of your house, facing the garden, and the compass points south, then you have a south-facing garden. This will determine just how much sun your garden will get.

  • What's the easiest way to make a sun map of your garden?

    The easiest way to make a sun map is with the picture method. Take one Saturday to set up a camera facing your garden and document the sun in real time. Then, you'll know exactly where to put your vegetable garden with little effort at all.

How to Make a Sun Map of Your Garden (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Reed Wilderman

Last Updated:

Views: 6518

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Reed Wilderman

Birthday: 1992-06-14

Address: 998 Estell Village, Lake Oscarberg, SD 48713-6877

Phone: +21813267449721

Job: Technology Engineer

Hobby: Swimming, Do it yourself, Beekeeping, Lapidary, Cosplaying, Hiking, Graffiti

Introduction: My name is Reed Wilderman, I am a faithful, bright, lucky, adventurous, lively, rich, vast person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.