Organic Gardening
Tips
If you'd like to try your hand at organic
gardening, you may find the experience quite enjoyable
and fulfilling. Whether you choose to grow flowers, herbs,
shrubs, trees or vegetables, all of your gardening efforts are
well rewarded when you choose to garden organically.
Organic vegetable and fruit gardening is particularly
popular, because once you're able to harvest and eat the foods
you've grown, you know for sure you're not putting any
chemicals or harmful ingredients into your body. And as a
bonuse, the foods often taste much better too!
A key element in organic gardening is soil preparation. By
making sure to enhance your soil before planting anything, then
regularly each new spring, you're helping your soil become as
fertile as it can be. Additionally, soil preparation helps with
proper oxygen flow to your plants, gives them room to grow, and
provides the nutrition and vitamins they need to produce
outstanding blooms, fruits or foods.
The best organic gardening tip you can find is to use
compost. Now, many people think making compost involves having
a large smelly pile of rotting food and organic materials in
your yard for months. And this is true if you choose to create
an actual compost pile from scratch. You can however, buy
compost from other organic gardeners or organic supply stores.
A better option though, is to simply mix organic materials into
your garden beds several weeks before you start planting.
Mixing organic materials into your garden beds is very
simple and easy. Just turn the soil of the garden bed first,
and pull out any weeds or roots that might be accumulated. Then
toss some organic materials into the bed.
Organic materials are everyday items most of us use. If you
have a fireplace for instance, it probably needs to be cleaned
out from the winter's use, right? So add a healthy does of
fireplace ash to your garden bed. Then add some dry grass and
leaf clippings, some shredded newspaper, small bits of tree
bark or wood chips, coffee and tea grounds, and chopped
vegetable or fruit matter from the kitchen.
Once you've tossed in a variety of organic materials, simply
mix them into the turned soil of your garden bed. Then for the
next three to four weeks, water and turn the garden bed soil
about every three days or so. This will keep the soil moist and
help air flow so the organic matter breaks down fairly quickly.
Once you're ready, go ahead and place your new plants or seeds
into the freshly prepared garden bed.
Now the second best organic gardening tip you can receive is
all about weed control. Once you have your new plants in the
ground, cover the soil around those plants with a thick layer
of mulch. Dried grass or leaf clippings, straw, and tree bark
all make wonderful garden mulch. Be sure to make the garden
mulch thick, because the more light that's blocked, the more
weeds you'll keep from appearing in your garden bed. And if you
can keep the weeds under control, you've conquered most of the
common potential pest problems that occur with organic
gardening.
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