Gorgar
Greenhorn
Interactive farm planner for Stardew Valley
Newest version of the well known Stardew Valley Planner
stardew.info
The theory behind this greenhouse is to expand on the weekly harvest pattern already in use by many players: one main harvest per week, with two additional visits during the week to shake fruit trees. This layout contains 32 fruit trees (224 weekly fruit), 104 soil plants, and 92 garden pot plants. The 32 fruit trees might be shocking some of you. Given sufficient equipment to process the fruit, fruit trees are the most profitable use of any given greenhouse tile, even in the middle.
Assuming artisan, ancient fruit in the soil, pineapples in the pots, deluxe retaining soil, and peach or pomegranate trees, the resulting 420 weekly fruits could be sold raw for 162,624 (2,601,984 yearly), or processed into wine for 487,872 (7,805,952 yearly). Add 9,408 to your weekly total if you're using banana trees. 3 big sheds will hold 411 kegs, giving you a remainder of 9 kegs to perhaps use outdoors as timers.
However, in 1.5, cabins are better than ever as a shed replacement. Instead of building 3 sheds, build 3 cabins, and have 3 additional farmers join and upgrade them. Whether you do local co-op with yourself or recruit actual humans to assist you in upgrading cabins is your decision. The first and second floor of a cabin will allow you to fit more than 340 kegs, garden pots, or other tools of your choosing. I'm not aware of any optimized layouts, therefore I don't know the maximum number of tools you can fit. Regardless, you now have indoor space to easily accommodate an additional 280 pineapple pots and 700 kegs.
The extra pineapple wine brings your weekly total to 840,672. That works out to 13,450,752 per year. Plus, cabins allow you to have additional cellars. 4 cellars with 125 casks each will allow 1,000 bottles of iridium ancient fruit wine per year, increasing your yearly income to 15,760,752. Casks have their detractors, and there are more profitable ways to use a cellar. Notably, running an additional 62 pineapple pots and 62 kegs in a cellar for a year will make more money than running 189 casks of starfruit wine for a year. But we've already reached a pretty high effort threshold, so instead I will halt the plummet into optimization. Like most optimization posts, I don't expect many will use all of the ideas exactly as presented. Hopefully everyone can find some food for thought in this buffet.
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