Home > Growing tips & recipes > Small or Poor Yields: How Overcrowding, Nutrient Deficiencies, and Poor Pollination Affect Your Harvest 5 min read 21.07.2025 Small or Poor Yields: How Overcrowding, Nutrient Deficiencies, and Poor Pollination Affect Your Harvest Small or poor yields can leave even the most enthusiastic grower disheartened. This guide explores how overcrowding, nutrient deficiencies, and poor pollination affect your harvest and more importantly, how to fix them. Discover easy, organic strategies to improve airflow, boost soil health, and attract pollinators for a bumper crop of fruit and veg. Grow smarter, not harder, and start turning those underwhelming yields into real garden gluts. There’s nothing more disappointing than tending your veg patch for months only to end up with a few sad tomatoes, stringy beans, or leafy plants that never quite get to the “harvest” part. If your yields are smaller than expected or the fruit never comes at all, you’re not alone.The good news? Small or poor yields are almost always caused by fixable issues, and once we understand how overcrowding, nutrient deficiencies, and poor pollination affect your harvest, we can start turning things around.Overcrowding: When Too Much of a Good Thing BackfiresWe’ve all done it, sown one too many seeds “just in case” and then let them all grow. But packing plants too closely together forces them to compete for light, nutrients, and airflow. The result? Weak plants with fewer flowers, more disease, and lower yields.How to Fix It:Follow spacing guidelines on seed packets (yes, really). Thin out seedlings early and ruthlessly. Train climbing crops vertically to free up space and reduce congestion. Group smaller, faster-growing crops with larger ones to maximise your layout without crowding.Nutrient Deficiencies: Starved Plants Can’t PerformEven with great compost, garden soil can become depleted after a few seasons. If your plants are slow to grow, yellowing, or flowering but not fruiting, chances are they’re lacking key nutrients, especially nitrogen, phosphorus, or potassium.Look out for:Yellowing leaves = nitrogen deficiency Poor root or flower development = phosphorus deficiency Weak stems and low resistance = potassium deficiencyHow to Fix It:Feed plants regularly with organic fertilisers suited to their growth stage. Top dress with homemade compost or worm castings. Use a balanced liquid feed like seaweed extract during flowering and fruiting.Poor Pollination: No Bees, No BountyFlowers blooming but no fruit forming? It’s likely a pollination problem. Tomatoes, courgettes, beans, and peppers all need good pollination to produce. Without the buzz of bees or other pollinators, flowers simply drop and your harvest disappears with them.How to Fix It:Plant pollinator-friendly flowers like calendula, borage, and alyssum nearby. Hand-pollinate where needed, especially in greenhouses by gently brushing flowers with a soft paintbrush or tapping blooms. Avoid pesticides, even organic ones, during bloom times as they can harm beneficial insects.Other Common Causes of Poor YieldsLack of sunlight – Fruiting crops like tomatoes and peppers need 6–8 hours of direct sun. Incorrect watering – Too much or too little water stresses plants and reduces yields. Temperature stress – Courgettes won’t fruit in a cold summer. Lettuce bolts in heat.Keep a close eye on your plants, they’ll tell you what’s wrong if we’re paying attention.Bumper harvests aren’t about luck, they’re about balance. Give plants space to breathe, feed the soil, and make sure the pollinators feel welcome. Fix these three key areas, and even the smallest garden can produce gluts of juicy tomatoes, plump beans, and crunchy cucumbers. Meet the author Nelly Nelly works in the She Grows Veg marketing department and is an incredible cook! She's learning how to grow veg fast in her very own container garden. Her favourites so far are the Dwarf Sunflower called 'Sunspot' and our Dwarf Pea called 'Tom Thumb'. Previous How to Fix Misshapen Vegetables Caused by Watering, Nutrient Issues, and Pests Next Declining Pollinators: How the Shortage of Bees and Insects Affects Fruit Set in Squash, Cucumbers, and Tomatoes