Organic Gardening Tips
helping our customers succeed is our passion
More and more gardeners are adopting organic
gardening, and having great success. A
steady supply of healthy organic fruits and
vegetables are the main benefit gardeners look for
when creating an organic garden at their home. We
are dedicated to helping you achieve the organic
gardening results you want. The tips below will help
you get those results.
Plan Your Organic
Garden - Planning is crucial to a
successful organic garden. You need to consider the
layout your plots. North-facing gardens in the
southern hemisphere and south-facing gardens in the
northern hemisphere are best. If your area is windy,
you will need to find solutions for this too.
Fencing and wind-barrier plantings are popular ways
to block excessive wind.
Having water close by is just as important. Installing an irrigation system with a timer is a terrific idea. It will make the difference between enjoying your garden and being a slave to it. If you are planting trees and shrubs, check what their mature size will be. Many shrubs and trees are difficult to move. Trees will grow and make shade, so don't forget they do this. Sun-loving plants and flowers can't thrive in the shade.
Proper Watering - We all know that
plants need water, but over and under-watering are
some of the biggest reasons for an unsuccessful
garden. Over-watering prevents plants from creating
deep root systems, which are essential to the
long-term health of the plant and your garden.
Over-watering also tends to leach nutrients and lime
out of the soil, causing poor growth and acidity.
Finally, over-watering can wash chemicals,
fertilizers, weed killers and plant nutrients off
your property and into streams, rivers, ponds, and
lakes. Such a situation can contaminate groundwater
and, eventually, drinking water.
Water your plants deeply about once a week and make
sure the water goes deep into the soil and is not
just wetting the surface. Under-watering your plants
leads to dehydration. This weakens and stresses the
plants, makes them susceptible to diseases, and
reduces yields. Mulch can help with both of these
problems. Mulch helps maintain more consistent
moisture for your plants, and helps prevent weeds.
Avoid Using Inorganic Fertilizers
- Inorganic fertilizers (those green crystals)
contain too much salt and heavy metals, and prevent
the growth of earthworms and soil microorganisms.
They provide major nutrients, but don't feed the
soil. The bottom line with fertilizers is: You want
to feed the soil, not your plants, your plants know
how much to feed themselves!
Excess nitrogen can decrease the number of flowers
and fruits your plants produce. And excess nutrients
in general pollute our waterways. These have become
dead zones in many regions where major rivers run
into the oceans.
Avoid Using Too Much
Fertilizer - Even organic fertilizer
can be overdone. More fertilizer is not better. The
main idea is to maintain the soils PH balance. If
your soils PH balance is okay, then one inch of
compost is sufficient for your vegetables and
flowers for a whole year. Adding too much
fertilizer, organic or inorganic only leads to
excessive vegetative growth, not actual production
of fruits and vegetables.
You can start enjoying the healthy benefits of indoor and outdoor organic gardening at any scale, today. From a small herb garden for your kitchen, grown in an attractive compact garden system, to a basement dedicated to plant propagation or production gardening, there's a system to match every budget and need.