Organic Gardening Methods – Home-Garden-Tips.com Organic Gardening Tips and Resources https://home-garden-tips.com Tips on planning and maintaining your dream organic garden! Wed, 29 Apr 2020 04:27:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.9 https://home-garden-tips.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/cropped-organic-favicon-32x32.png Organic Gardening Methods – Home-Garden-Tips.com Organic Gardening Tips and Resources https://home-garden-tips.com 32 32 Easy Step-By-Step Container Gardening – Create a Thriving Vegetable Garden the “No Sweat” Way https://home-garden-tips.com/2020/04/27/easy-step-by-step-container-gardening-create-a-thriving-vegetable-garden-the-no-sweat-way/ https://home-garden-tips.com/2020/04/27/easy-step-by-step-container-gardening-create-a-thriving-vegetable-garden-the-no-sweat-way/#respond Mon, 27 Apr 2020 05:17:30 +0000 http://home-garden-tips.com/?p=62829 An attractive and thriving container vegetable garden can be yours. In this container gardening guide I’ll give you all the information and tips you need to get started now. It’s fun, it’s easy. So let’s go…

Step 1 – Choose Your Veggies (Note: Use this guide to grow herbs, strawberries and flowers in your container garden too.)

What do you want to grow in your container veggie garden? The only rule is to choose vegetables that you actually like to eat – it’s one of the benefits of being a grown-up. There are many varieties of vegetables that have been developed especially for container gardening. Look for descriptive words like “bush,” “compact” or “dwarf” when buying vegetable seeds or transplants (small plants ready to put directly into the garden). It’s fun to start seeds indoors yourself (or in a mini greenhouse) about 8 weeks before it is expected to be warm enough to transplant them outside into your containers.

Tip: Plan to plant an extra pot or two of veggies to share with your friends.

Step 2 – Choose Your Veggie Planters

Gardening in containers is easy (you don’t need a PhD from a horticulture university to be successful – all you need is a little basic knowledge) but one of the most important factors in your gardening success is choosing appropriate garden planters. Nearly all vegetables and herbs will do well in a 5-gallon pot (12″ diameter and 12″ depth) but plants with shallow roots, like salad greens, will grow well in 6-8 inches of depth.

Use light colored pots for veggies that prefer cool temperatures (like lettuce and cabbage) and dark colored planters for heat loving plants (like tomatoes). For tall growing plants, choose pots made of heavy material like terracotta or add a layer of clean sand to the bottom of the planter for added weight and planter support.

Choose colors and styles of planters that compliment your house and yard. There is a large selection of beautiful garden planters available to suit any taste and budget. Consider self-watering garden planters for extra convenience and a sure water supply for thirsty plants on hot summer days. Some plants will do best if supported by a trellis or stake attached to the garden planter.

Tip: Share the fun and help a friend get started in veggie gardening.

Step 3 – Add Soil to Your Containers

The soil for vegetables that are grown in containers must be lightweight, loose, and hold moisture well. Regular soil is too heavy, compacts easily and should never be used in planters. It is important to choose a “soil-less” soil mix developed specifically for gardening in containers. These soils are various mixtures of vermiculite, perlite, peat moss and other nutrients.

The soil can be reused the following year by adding special soil boosters that replenish lost nutrients that vegetables require. Another benefit of using lightweight soil is that your planters will be easy to move around – one of the main advantages of container gardening is its portability.

Now for the fun part. The next step in our container gardening guide is…

Step 4 – Plant Your Veggie Garden

Follow the directions on the seed package to determine the best time for planting in your area based on your gardening hardiness zone. Use a zone finder tool to determine your zone by zip code and be sure to make a note of your zone number.

Many gardeners will sow seeds directly into garden planters for quick growing veggies like greens, but purchase transplants for longer maturing vegetables like tomatoes. After planting your seeds, spray soil lightly with a mister and cover pot with plastic wrap to retain moisture and warmth. Keep the soil moist at all times. When the seeds sprout, remove the plastic cover but continue to water very gently – remember they are baby veggies and need loving care.

Other information about the plant’s requirements (spacing, etc..) can be found on the seed package. Try to give each plant the conditions that they prefer. This is easy to do with container gardening – you control all of the environmental factors (soil, sun, water etc…).

Tip: Remember to add your favorite herbs, small fruits (like strawberries) and flowers (nasturtiums and dwarf marigolds are nice) to your veggie planters.

Bonus tip: Plant salad greens around the base of your tomato plant. By the time the tomato plant in the center needs the space you will have harvested the greens.

Step 5 – Fertilize and Water Veggies

Your veggies need to be watered daily and fertilized on a regular basis. Fertilizer is the key to abundant produce and healthy plants. Fertilizer replenishes the nutrients that plants need and that are washed away every time you water your containers. For best results look for complete organic fertilizers that are recommended especially for container gardening and fertilize according to the package directions.

Avoid using liquid fish emulsion fertilizer – cats and raccoons love the smell. (A special note about herbs: Herbs need less fertilizer than vegetables. So after the initial planting, you will not need to add fertilizer again.)

Watering must be done daily and more often on extremely hot summer days when the planter soil is likely to dry out quickly. Be sure you have free flowing drainage holes in your garden planter. Elevate veggie planters on bricks or wood to allow drainage and to protect surfaces. Consider watering aids and time-savers like self-watering planters, water-holding crystals that are added to the soil mix, and drip-irrigation systems designed especially for gardening in containers.

Tip: Put a layer of peat moss on top of the soil in each planter to help retain moisture.

Step 6 – Give Your Veggies Sunshine

Most vegetables require 6 hours of sunlight daily. Leafy vegetables like lettuce will do fine with somewhat less light. If necessary, putting planters on casters makes it easy to move your plants from areas of limited light to more sunny areas. Group pots of heat-loving veggies together in the warmest spot on your patio and cluster vegetables that prefer cooler temperatures in areas that are sheltered from the hot afternoon sun.

Garden design is a great opportunity to create a garden that is productive, creates useful extensions of your living space and is pleasing to look at. A potting bench can even be used as an outdoor buffet for family dining on the patio or deck.

Tip: Get your kids involved in gardening. Even kids that don’t like veggies will eat the baby carrots they grew themselves.

Step 7 – A Daily Gardening Schedule

Your new vegetable garden is very low maintenance requiring few supplies or tools, but you will need to water daily, fertilize regularly and be sure to harvest your veggies and berries as they ripen (the fruit of your labor). Herbs can be snipped and used as needed, either fresh or dried.

Most important of all, is to enjoy the time you spend in your garden – getting your hands in the soil and working with nature is relaxing and also provides a satisfying sense of accomplishment.

Tip: An attractive planter of salad greens or herbs makes a healthy and thoughtful gift.

It’s that easy. You’ll soon discover that there is nothing like the taste of fresh, just-picked vegetables from your own thriving container garden.

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The Secrets of Container Garden Designing https://home-garden-tips.com/2020/04/26/the-secrets-of-container-garden-designing/ https://home-garden-tips.com/2020/04/26/the-secrets-of-container-garden-designing/#respond Mon, 27 Apr 2020 03:31:15 +0000 http://home-garden-tips.com/?p=62824 The first and most important secret of container gardening design is realizing that the final resting place of the gardening container itself, will decide what sorts of plants you can use. You cannot just flick through the flower catalogue, deciding what flowers to use, based purely on what you think would look nice. Having decided where the garden container will be sited, you must choose your plants depending on their preferences of soil, light, moisture and of course, the size of the container.

Having researched the needs of the plants and found out what sorts will be suitable for the space, you can next decide on a “palette” of colors. This does not just have to be about how their colors fit in with their surroundings. You can use the color of the plants for other more subtle effects. For instance, a container full of blue and mauve plants will seem to recede from the viewer, giving a sense of distance. Put such a container at the far edge of a patio and the patio will seem to be larger. Again, if you put a garden container full of blue flowers at the end wall of a small town garden, it will make the garden seem longer.

Bright red and orange flowers will have the opposite effect and appear to shorten the distance between the garden container and the viewer. If you place blue flowers behind red flowers in the same container, they will contrast and make the red flowers clearly stand out. If you put the red flowers behind the blue flowers they will appear to clash horribly. Remember though, that there are no hard and fast rules in art and garden design, but you cannot break the rules unless you know them. Experiment for yourself, after all rules are made to be broken!

So, to use these secrets of container gardening practically, you can fill a space, like a patio, with garden containers full of red plants to the front and garden containers full of blue, mauve and lilac towards the back. When viewed from the front, say framed by a window, the space will appear more grand and bigger than it really is.

For the general planting design of a classical garden container, you should make sure that the tallest growing plants are placed towards the back. Next, you should select a pair of the same or similar looking plants. One of these should be planted at both ends of the tall row, slightly forward of it. In front of the tall row and in the middle of the container, you should plant your special feature plant. This is the central feature of the container, the one that gives the wow! factor.

Either side of this, you should place a pair of complementary plants as fillers. You must make sure that they do not detract from your feature plant. Remember if you have more than one feature plant, you are blessed, and rather than place them all together in one container, make up some more containers. Lastly in front of all the plants in the garden container, plant some small flowers that hang over slightly and flow over the edges of the container to soften it’s edges.

If you are unsure of what color blooms and foliage to use, then take a leaf out of the artists book and find out about “color wheels”. Basically, you should think of a rainbow and the way the that the colors are placed. The colors that are next to each other are called “complimentary” colors. The colors from either side of the rainbow are called “contrasting” colors. Use complimentary colors to make the eye gently flow over the container. Using contrasting colors to distract and make the eye stop and stare.

There are no hard and fast rules in designing a container. Try looking at as many of them as you can in books or flower shows. Decide which ones you think work and which ones do not. Take a camera with you to visit gardens and make notes. Do not be scared to talk to the gardeners, if you can. Most will be only to willing to share with you their container gardening secrets and tell you about the flowers they have used. Do not slavishly follow others though. Use this information only as a starting point and learn to express yourself, your ideas, your sense of beauty. Eventually, you will develop your own style and vision.

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Creating and Planting a Container Garden https://home-garden-tips.com/2020/04/26/creating-and-planting-a-container-garden/ https://home-garden-tips.com/2020/04/26/creating-and-planting-a-container-garden/#respond Mon, 27 Apr 2020 03:25:48 +0000 http://home-garden-tips.com/?p=62821 We all have a garden planter or two dotted around our gardens, perhaps filled with a specimen plant or a seasonal display. But there is a lot to be said for using containers as the design basis for a garden. Containers are probably one of the most versatile forms of gardening, allowing you not only to choose type of container but also the plant and its location. There are many advantages to container gardening. You can move your containers to different locations within your garden, thereby creating an instantly different effect. You can change planting displays as often as you like, perhaps making the most of the choice of different seasonal plants. You can also grow plants which like different soil types to your own by simply filling them with the right type of compost.

Types of garden planter

There are an ever increasing number of different types of container you can buy, with materials and designs to suit every climate and different tastes. Pots and tubs are probably the most popular type of planter available. They are for the most part versatile and easily moved to different positions in the garden. Pots and tubs come in an enormous variety of sizes and designs, both traditional and modern. Materials vary from moss covered terracotta and artificially aged stone planters, to reused car tires and fiber glass. There are no rules when it comes to choosing a type of container and there is no reason why you can’t combine traditional with modern. Just be aware that your designs and materials complement each other in some way.

Pots and tubs are equally as versatile when it comes to planting. You can grow almost anything you like in a container. Formally clipped box and other evergreens look stunning as focal points, as do specimen standard plants such as bay trees or photinias. Group a number of planters of different sizes together with a plant type such as herbs. A particularly stunning planter can be filled with seasonal annuals for an all year round display.

Window boxes are another great way to grow plants and enhance the appearance of your house and garden. Window boxes are particularly useful if you have a tiny garden or even if you have no garden at all! You can buy ready- made window boxes, have them made bespoke to your requirements or simply make your own. Window boxes don’t have to be made of wood. I have seen some beautifully aged metal ones as well as reconstituted stone ground-level boxes. Grow seasonal displays or plant up a box outside your kitchen window with herbs or easy to grow edibles like lettuce.

Hanging baskets are probably the most versatile of all containers. They can be hung on walls, fences and even in trees. Not only can your display be changed from season to season, but you can also grow edible plants such as tumbling tomatoes and strawberries and even a selection of herbs, hung near your kitchen door. Hanging baskets also come in a variety of shapes and sizes. More traditionally made from wicker, but I have seen some great modern alternatives made from brightly colored plastics.

Troughs and sinks can be used to create mini container gardens in one place. Although strictly speaking you can grow anything you like in a trough shaped planter, the lack of depth makes them more suited to growing alpines and herbs. Stone troughs probably look the best in any garden but why not also think about getting hold of an old Belfast sink which looks particularly effective when planted with herbs under a kitchen window.

Another type of container not readily thought about is the raised bed. Raised beds are a great way of growing both vegetables and garden plants. They are easy to maintain and therefore popular with gardeners with impaired mobility. They are also an easy way of adding structure to an otherwise flat garden space, lifting plants higher up and creating the illusion of different levels to a garden.

Some planting rules

If you are going to maintain a healthy container garden, there are a few rules you will need to follow whatever type of planter. Drainage is all important for container grown plants. Make sure your container has adequate drainage holes and always add some broken pot or crocks to the bottom of the planter to aid drainage. If your container is to be placed on a hard surface, sit it on some feet to raise it above ground level slightly. Use the right type of compost. Try not to overcrowd your container, most plants will need plenty of room to spread their roots and grow into healthy specimens. Conversely, don’t let your plants become pot-bound. Although there are a few plants which do well in these conditions, as a rule, either divide you plant or re-pot it into a larger container.

In extremely cold weather both your containers and their plants will need some protection. For those that are not frost hardy it is probably best to over winter them into a cold greenhouse. Others can be wrapped in straw or fleece to protect them from frost.

Perhaps the most important consideration of all for container grown plants is water. During dry weather in the summer months you will have to make sure your pots are well watered. Materials like terracotta dry out quickly as the clay absorbs water, so you will often find yourself having to water at least twice a day. Early morning and evening is best. During the winter water container plants sparingly. Waterlogged containers easily freeze killing the roots of the plants in them.

I am a firm believer that a garden reflects some of the personality of the gardener who tends it. Garden planters are a great way of putting your stamp on a garden, particularly if you are a little bit quirky! I have seen old wooden boats used as planters, odd worn out walking boots, pan tiles, antique wash tubs, old car tyres and even a disused toilet!

Garden Planters source unusual outdoor and indoor planters, and other garden related gifts – whatever your taste, be it traditional, modern or just a bit quirky, we will have something for you. Run by two qualified and creative gardeners, Garden Planters will also plant up your chosen planter with an arrangement of your choice. We believe garden planters are an integral part of any garden – they enhance the overall design and say a little something about the person to whom the garden belongs.

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Should You Use Organic Garden Seeds? https://home-garden-tips.com/2014/03/11/should-you-use-organic-garden-seeds/ https://home-garden-tips.com/2014/03/11/should-you-use-organic-garden-seeds/#respond Tue, 11 Mar 2014 21:59:33 +0000 http://gardening.amaraq.com/?p=68

8Sometimes organic gardeners question if they should use only organic garden seed. That is a question with a simple, but complicated, answer.

We will try to look into the ins and outs of going totally organic in your garden. We want to look at, do you really need to use only organic seed, finding organic garden seed and saving your own.

If you want to grow organic vegetables to keep the chemicals in grocery store foods out of your body, is it necessary to grow only organic seeds? The short answer is yes. But, not everyone growing organic is concerned about being totally chemical free. They just want to have great tasting food.

There is little chemical residue in a seed, but there is residue. If you are trying to be as chemical free as possible then you will want to seek out a seed company that grows chemically free.

Many companies are starting to carry organically grown seeds as they are getting very popular today.

Check with catalog companies for the ones that are organic. Some companies only grow organic, like Seeds Of Change. Other companies will have mostly conventionally grown, but will offer some of their line as organic.

You will need to read the catalog description to be sure it is what you want. Most seed catalogs plainly mark which ones are organic. A big plus with the organic seeds is that a lot of them are heirloom plants. Heirloom plants usually have more flavor than newer varieties.

One of the best ways to know for sure what you plant in your garden is chemical free is to save your own seed. This can be a fun hobby by itself.

Garden plants require different methods of preserving the their harvest. You will have to look up each plant to be sure how to get good viable seed. But, most are straight forward and just common sense.

You can start with the easy plants to preserve and move on to the more difficult ones as you gain experience. There are some really good books that explain how to grow plants for seeds and how to harvest and preserve them.

Organic gardening is a fun way to get delicious healthy food. Using organic garden seed is necessary to be totally chemical free. Check your catalogs for certified organic seed and try saving your own seed for fun and the peace of mind that what you have to eat is truly chemical free.

More tips on organic gardening can be found at this link, click here. The web site address is http://solutionsfororganicgardening.com.

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Organic Gardening – Preparing Your Garden Soil For Planting https://home-garden-tips.com/2014/03/11/organic-gardening-preparing-your-garden-soil-for-planting/ https://home-garden-tips.com/2014/03/11/organic-gardening-preparing-your-garden-soil-for-planting/#respond Tue, 11 Mar 2014 21:31:58 +0000 http://gardening.amaraq.com/?p=48

5Soil preparation is one of the most important steps in grow a healthy and productive crop of any kind. Soil is the key to organic gardening, and the crops you grow will only be as healthy as the soil they are grown in.

The first step in preparing any soil is to know what you are working with – clay, loam, sand, silt, or a combination of one or more of these types of soil. Doing a simple jar test at home or having your soil tested by a local Cooperative Extension is the only way you will know what you are dealing with. Cooperative Extension Services normally will advise you on how to improve your soil once they test it.

Once the ground can be worked in the early spring, loosen a small area of your garden to a depth of about 8 – 10 inches to check the moisture content of the soil – this can simply be done with a shovel or spading fork. If the soil is saturated with moisture from either snow melt or rain, it is too wet for working. A simple test is to take a handful of soil and squeeze it into a ball. If the ball of soil can be easily be broken by a gentle poke of your index finger, it is dry enough to be worked. Once you have thoroughly worked the soil, it should be loose and free of clumps.

If you are starting a garden in an area that previously was a lawn or turf areas, remove any clumps of sod and put them in your compost area, or turn them over and expose their root system toward the sun to dry out. This will help prevent any grass areas from taking over your garden.

Plant life and seeds both need oxygen to survive, and the only way they can get this is with a soil that has a healthy structure. A good soil structure is one that will retain moisture and nutrients, and drain well at the same time. Amending soil with organic matter will greatly improve the structure, and create an environment that will greatly benefit the microorganisms that live under the surface of your garden. This all needs to be attended to before you start any type of planting; once seeds or any type of plant life has been planted in your garden, there is little you can do to improve the soil structure.

If your garden soil is like most gardens, less than perfect, you need to improve it. The healthier the soil is in your garden, the healthier the crops will be that you are growing. Organic matter is the key to improving an organic gardens soil structure, compost being the ideal choice. When organic matter is added to a sandy soil, it acts like a glue to hold the soil particles together, and when added to a clay soil, it works just the opposite. With clay soil, organic matter gets between soil particles and loosens the soil to allow air and water to reach the root systems of plants. Any time there are no crops growing in your garden is the ideal time to amend the soil with organic matter, it doesn’t matter what time of the year or season it is.

One of the most overlooked parts of a soil is the pH level. This is the degree of acidity or alkalinity of the soil. This is a simple test that can be done yourself with a test kit that can be purchased at most garden center. Once you have the results of the test, it will indicate the present level of pH. If the results show levels that are out of an acceptable range for the crops you are growing, the addition of lime or sulfur will bring the soil into the proper range for growing your crops. Lime will neutralize the soils pH, and sulfur will make it more acidic.

A environment friendly and healthy way of gardening. Organic Gardening is away of gardening in harmony with nature. Growing a healthy and productive crop in a way that is healthier for both you and the environment [http://www.organicheirloomgardening.com/waterandsoil.html].

John Yazo

[http://www.organicheirloomgardening.com]

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Organic Gardening: 7 Things You Can Recycle to Use in Your Garden https://home-garden-tips.com/2014/03/11/organic-gardening-7-things-you-can-recycle-to-use-in-your-garden/ https://home-garden-tips.com/2014/03/11/organic-gardening-7-things-you-can-recycle-to-use-in-your-garden/#respond Tue, 11 Mar 2014 20:59:28 +0000 http://gardening.amaraq.com/?p=39

2You can save a lot of money by recycling items you would otherwise throw away and using them in your garden. Instead of paying $10-20 or more for a large pot, throw down an old tire and fill it with soil. This article lists seven things you can recycle for use in your flower or vegetable garden.

Don’t throw away that old tote bag! You can use it in your garden. Save the earth and a whole bunch of money too by recycling common household items to use in your garden. From milk jugs to old tires to 2 liter soda bottles, here are seven things you can recycle to use in your garden.

Milk Jugs: Plastic milk jugs have many uses in the garden. You can cut the tops off to use them as planters for small plants such as herbs or cut the bottoms off to make miniature greenhouses that you can place over plants when there is danger of frost. You can even cut them up to make plastic plant labels to identify your plants.

Old tires: You can use old tires as raised beds for flower or vegetable gardening. For plants that require deep soil, such as carrots, try stacking two tires on top of each other. Tires are great for growing potatoes because you can throw another tire on top as the potato plants grow and fill it up with more soil. This makes it easier to harvest the potatoes in the fall because the potatoes will be in the tires, not in the ground. Just remove the tires to get to the potatoes.

Tote Bags: Old tote bags and cheap reusable shopping bags can be used as hanging planters to make use of wall space. This is great for people who don’t have a lot of land. You can fill the bags with potting soil and hang them on a fence or wall. Since they hold quite a bit of soil, they can even be used with larger plants, such as tomatoes.

Cement Blocks: Discarded cement blocks can be used to build raised beds, create an attractive vertical garden, or keep your compost contained. Even new, you can often get concrete blocks for around $1 each or a little more. However, if you watch Craigslist, you can sometimes pick up used blocks for free.

Bricks: Sometimes you can find people giving away old bricks too. These are great for creating borders around the edges of your flower or vegetable plots. You can also use them to pave your garden paths. Paved paths keep weeds and grass from growing between beds, eliminating the need for mowing.

Tin Cans: Remove both the tops and bottoms of tin cans, set them on a try, and fill them up with potting soil. Use them to start your seedlings indoors. You can fill the trays with water to water the plants from the bottom. When you’re ready to transplant, you can plant the entire can or gently tap the can to knock the dirt loose and slide the plant out.

Foam Meat Trays: Save the foam trays you get from the supermarket when you buy chicken, beef or pork. Wash them up and use them as trays underneath the tin cans you start your seeds in.

Use Your Imagination

There are a lot more ways to recycle everyday things to use in your garden. Before you throw something in the trash, think about how you might be able to use it. Would it make a good pot? Could you use it to stake your plants? Could it be composted or used to make a garden bed? Use your imagination to think of creative ways to recycle the things you would normally throw away.

If you are looking for some more information on this container gardening ideas check out best organic gardening and see if it’s right for your gardening needs!

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