Archive for February, 2012

28
Feb

Flower Garden – Tips for the Novice Gardener

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Have you started a flower garden but aren’t impressed with the results? Perhaps the flowers are wilting or you don’t like the way they are positioned. Following are some gardening tips to help you achieve the flower garden you envisioned:

Water in Moderation.

Determining how often to water your garden can be frustrating. Some decide to water their garden several times a day which can drown the plants, or create mold around the plants. It is best to lightly water your flowers every other day. Use a watering can or an attachment on a hose that simulates a light rain effect. No need to water your flowers on rainy days.

Give Your Flowers Room to Grow.

Do not plant flowers too close together. Avoid the impulse to purchase a plethora of flowers then plant them closely together. This will create them that become hybrids of each other. Make sure the ones you plant in your garden have enough room to grow to their full potential without growing into or overtaking other flowers around it. Consult your local garden center for thoughts about flowers that will work best together.

Get the Right Soil.

It’s not necessarily sufficient to plant flowers in the soil contained in your yard. Some soil doesn’t contain the nutrients flowers need to bloom healthily. Prior to planting your flowers, purchase some nutrient-rich soil and mix it with regular soil. Also, purchase nutrients and place it in some water to feed them with.

Use these gardening tips to achieve a stunning flower garden.

25
Feb

Home Vegetable Gardening – Growing Cilantro

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A rose by any other name is still a rose, or so the saying goes, but cilantro by any other name could be called Chinese parsley or coriander. A quick search on some popular food recipe websites and in the matter of seconds I was able to find hundreds of recipes. Cilantro can be used three times, well sort of. You can harvest the leaves and add them to do your dish as an herb, or you can harvest the fruit also called coriander seeds which have a lemony-citrus flavor when crushed or you can harvest the roots which have an intense flavor and are most notably used in Asian cuisine. Which ever way you go, there is no doubting that cilantro should be part of your vegetable garden.

No need to worry about when to start your seeds indoors because cilantro won`t do well using this method. The reason being is that cilantro does not transplant well, so any growth you would have indoors would more than likely be lost once you moved it to the outdoors. Start your seeds outdoors at least one week beyond the final frost. You can then plant cilantro every 3 weeks up until a week prior to the first frost in the autumn months. This will give you a steady supply of cilantro throughout the year.

Cilantro seeds take about 10 days to germinate and grow well in full sun with a moderate watering in soil that has a pH level of at least 6.0 but not higher than 7.0. To test the pH level of your soil, grab a home soil testing kit from your local home or garden center for just a couple of bucks. Once you obtain your reading follow the instructions on the package to raise or lower your soil`s pH level as needed.

When the plant is eight inches tall it is ready to be harvested. You want to harvest the entire plant. If you want to use the seeds of the plant simply let it grow until it goes to seed then harvest the entire plant. Once the entire plant is harvested you can use the roots, leaves and seeds (if you let it grow that far) for a variety of dishes.

Avoid following carrots if you plan on putting your cilantro in a plant rotation cycle and avoid planting cilantro near fennel as the two plants do not make sure good companions, whereas tomatoes make for a great companion plant.

As you can see adding cilantro, Chinese parsley, coriander to your home vegetable garden is easier than you might think. Get some in your garden today.

22
Feb

Gardening Must Haves

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Typically gardening is categorized into indoor gardening, outdoor gardening, water gardening, container and raised bed gardening. These are the most popular ways of gardening on a domestic as well as commercial scale. Whether you opt it as a hobby or as a profession, here are the essential things you will need to succeed in healthy gardening.

TOOLS

On any level or type of gardening you can only succeed if you use the right tools. Experts suggest that spade, hand trowel, digging fork, rake, hoe, bypass pruners, dandelion digger, hand cultivator, loppers and a long hose with a rain wand must be owned by any individual who aims to pursue gardening either as a pastime or as a profession. These basic things will come in handy on every stage but you must use them carefully to avoid damaging your plant’s roots.

ORGANIC GARDENING

Organic gardening is becoming increasingly popular due to the natural ingredients and techniques it utilizes. It is given significance over synthetic gardening because it poses the least amount of danger otherwise caused by employing artificial or synthetic means. If you want to adopt organic gardening here is what you will require, garlic for pest control, milk for fungal control, beer as a slug trap, floating row covers for preventing all kinds of insects, newspapers to smother weeds and also add more organic value to your soil.

VEGETABLE GARDENS

On a residential scale, growing basic vegetables can prove vey handy. You can not only save time an money from utilizing home grown vegetables but the fact that you get to eat them fresh from the garden makes the experience all the more exciting. Your home garden must have tomatoes, basils, bell peppers, lettuces, cilantros and eggplants. To add to that herbs like hives, thyme, oregano, parsley, sage, rosemary and sweet marjoram will make take the culinary experience to a whole new level.

With these things not only will your home gardening become more convenient and exciting but you will also experience a new lease of life in your home cooking experience.

19
Feb

God’s Way of Vegetable Gardening

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The major religions of the world (Christianity, Islam and Judaism) believe that God ‘planted’ a garden in Eden. In other words, God was a ‘Gardener’. But if God were to plant a garden today, how would He do it?

I am sure He won’t pollute the soil with artificial fertilizers, pesticides, insecticides, herbicides and fungicides. In other words, God would grow an organic garden. If you want to start a vegetable garden God’s way, start an organic one.

Organic vegetable gardening starts with preparing your soil. If your plot of land has never been hoed before, you need to flatten the ground, get rid of the weeds, cut the grass and fill up the holes with soil and compost. You can either buy compost or make some yourself. If you wish to make it yourself, start by collecting green waste and brown waste. Green waste comprises things like grass cuttings, parts of plant, fruit skins, vegetable pieces from the kitchen etc. Brown waste would include things like dry leaves, straw, twigs, sawdust etc. You should not include meat, bones, fish, animal waste, dairy products, oils, diseased plants, pesticide-laced and pest-infested plants or weeds that have gone to seed. Instead, throw them away.

Make your compost have a ratio of about two parts brown waste to one part green waste for fastest decomposition. Put a layer of the green and brown mix at the bottom, followed by a layer of soil and pour some water on the mix. Repeat this step a few times. Then leave it alone and nature will take its course. Once a week, turn the compost around with a gardening fork to aerate it. Keep your compost slightly wet at all times. Do not expose it to direct sunlight. If it rains, cover it with plywood or some other covering.

After a few weeks, the compost pile turns dark in color and you won’t be able to recognize the original materials. Now when you turn it over, it crumbles easily. That’s when your compost is ‘mature’ and ready for use. Spread out the compost over your garden soil in a layer two to three inches thick. This is how you fertilize your soil the organic way.
The next thing to do is plant the seeds. It would be a good idea to plant a variety of seeds in your garden. This is called mixed cultivation. For example, grow cabbages and dwarf (French) beans together or carrots, tomatoes and celery together. In this way, each type of vegetable helps the others grow better by warding off pests, providing shade etc.

As the seeds germinate and grow, you need to watch out for pests. In organic vegetable gardening, controlling pests and diseases is done naturally such as using biological control. For example, you can grow flowers or have a weed patch nearby your vegetable garden to attract friendly insects (such as parasite wasps, ladybirds etc) that would destroy insect pests (such as aphids, squash bugs, mealy bugs etc). Another form of biological pest control is to plant herbs such as peppermint, basil or sage etc. These herbs will repel insect pests.

Mixed cultivation of different varieties of vegetables as explained above is in itself a means of preventing plant diseases. Another organic method to prevent disease is to always ensure yours soil is healthy and clean.
Organic planting is most certainly ‘God’s Way’ of planting a vegetable garden. Try it and you find that your vegetables are healthier, more nutritious and safe-to-consume.

16
Feb

The National Gardening Association

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The National Gardening Association was founded in 1973 as a non-profit organization with the goal of educating people about different types of plants and shrubbery. The National Gardening Association is headquartered in South Burlington, Vermont. The National Gardening Association provides the majority of plant-based educational to most schools with grade levels ranging from K-12. The National Gardening Association teaches health and well being, helps develop communities, home gardening and offers various programs and activities.

The programs and activities run by the National Gardening Association are the Adopt a School Garden, the GROW Program, Vermont Garden Park, Teacher Professional Development, National Youth Garden Grants and many, many more. Aside from the programs listed here, the National Gardening Association also offers a variety of other grants and awards.

The National Gardening Association feels that children should be taught on a daily basis about plant life and how to run a garden properly. The NGA believes that gardening can strengthen a child emotionally, mentally and even physically. Teaching gardening helps students understand the natural way of life for plants and better understand where their food comes from. Not only do students learn where their food comes from but it also provides a look into healthy living; such as how to eat a proper meal to live a healthy life.

The National Gardening Association began their Adopt a School Garden program to aid in the instruction of students across the country when it comes to a healthy life and learning about the natural plant like around the world today. When someone adopts a garden for a school a representative from the NGA will complete a list of items for the adoption to get off the ground running. The list includes finding some to become the garden team leader, what area of plant education the school will focus on, send the school educational materials and literature for the teachers, finding a way to get the surrounding community involved and ways to encourage long term sustainability of the garden.

For the awards and grants that the National Gardening Association gives out, there are requirements that need to be met. They are pretty simple too. The requirements are that the school interested in receiving a grant must be teaching and gardening with students between the ages of 3 to 18 and the group can consist of no less than 15 students at anytime. Any school that wins a grant or scholarship from the National Gardening Association must fill out a survey at the end of every year that explains the impact of the program on the students. Each individual grant has a different type of impact report to file with the association at the end of each year.

Finally, the GROW Program is an ongoing project run by the National Gardening Association advocating the importance of gardening at schools, home and in communities. The GROW Program also provides year round gardening tips to beginners and experts as well as national gardening events and conferences. The National Gardening Association: “When you garden, you grow.”

12
Feb

Herb Gardening

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Herb gardening is gaining in popularity. Herbs and spices have been grown and cultivated for thousands of years by people using them for the benefits that they offered.   People are learning how to grow herbs from kitchen herbs to herbs used for medicinal purposes, and some are just good ornamental plants for decorating.  Herbs are relatively small so they can be grown indoors as well as your backyard, on a balcony, on a deck or patio and window boxes.  

Growing herbs is not hard and people are turning their love for gardening into successful businesses by growing and selling or bartering fresh herbs, plants and other related items.  You can find many resources on the Internet about where to find seeds, plants and the supplies to start.  Herb gardening can become a life long hobby which provides spiritual renewal and a stress relief.  

There are many kinds of herbs but if you want something to break of the humdrum of green, there are two herbs that will provide color to your herb garden all summer long.  Both are annuals and are eager re-seeders and you will see them every year once they are in your garden.

Borage is good as a companion for tomato plants.  It adds to their flavor if grown nearby and it is not poisonous.  You can actually use it in salads and for making herb butter and dips.  Borage has a cucumber like taste and is very good when cooked with cabbage, but does not offer a very good taste on its own. 

Calendula is another herb you can use to add some color to the garden.  It is referred to as a pot of marigold.  It is suspected to offer many medicinal benefits such as healing, aiding with digestion, helping to fight fungal infections and a cure for diaper rash.  The last one alone would be enough to justify its existence.  The petals from this herb can be used to make a skin cream or a cleanser and if used as an infusion it can actually lighten hair.  

To add some fragrance to your herb garden, try adding some lavender hyssop and some bergamot.  Both of these will attract hummingbirds, butterflies and bees.  Both of these herbs are used in some teas as well as potpourris.   Lavender leaves when crushed can be used to repel those pesky mosquitoes of the summer, by rubbing the leaves on your skin.  

Again, herbs have many uses beyond cooking including potential medicinal purposes. They are very easy to grow.  You can even buy an appliance that sits on your kitchen counter called an AeroGarden.  It is automatic and even if you don’t have a green thumb, you cannot mess this up.

09
Feb

Understanding Manure For Your Home Vegetable Garden

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I love the scene in the television show Seinfeld where character George Costanza, played by actor Jason Alexander, is talking to a female named Kelly, played by actress Tracy Kolis, about his love of the word manure. The funny line is, “when you consider the other choices, manure, is pretty refreshing.” Of course Kelly cuts the date short as she finds talking about the subject pretty strange.

Had Kelly been a vegetable gardener she might have gone off on a tangent as to the wonderful benefits manure has for your home vegetable garden. I guess the “show about nothing” did not want to take that route.

Manure from the proper sources (I’ll get to that in a moment) presents you with a great opportunity to add much needed nutrients back into the soil and with seasoned manure from these same sources, you can brew a wonderful elixir called manure tea. We’ll cover manure tea sometime in the future.

Here is how manure works to benefit your home vegetable garden. Manure is nothing more than organic matter that contains tremendous amounts of nutrients your vegetable plants can use, such as nitrogen. However, in order for your plants to use those nutrients they must be released from the manure. The only way this can occur is to have a higher life form feed on the manure (yeah I know it sounds gross) such as worms that then release their own castings that plants then use. This is just a basic overview of course.

There are both good and bad manures that you need to know about. Your dog, cat and human manure is bad. It can be toxic to your plants as well as the underlying ecosystem. Do not use these manures. Good manure comes from sources such as cows, horses, chickens and other types of grain or grass fed live stock.

Now that you know how manure works and what the good types of manure are, the next obvious step is to know how to add it to your home vegetable garden. Simply add the manure to your garden and mix it in with your soil. The important part, which I will get into in a moment, is knowing exactly at what time of the year you should be adding it. Make sure you mix it in thoroughly with a pitchfork, broad fork or tiller.

This step is crucial in the adding stage and that is what time of the year should it go in. If you have fresh manure, meaning it is less than 6 months old (yeah I know who keeps the dates on this stuff), then it is recommended that you mix the manure into your soil at the end of your growing season, which for most of us is in the autumn months. If you have seasoned manure then you should add it no later than 4 weeks before planting. This gives it plenty of time to start releasing all of those wonderful nutrients.

So where do you get manure? You could buy it at a local home or garden center, but why do that if you can get it for free from a local horse or cow farm. Just check on websites such as Craigslist in the farm and garden section. Also, if you do find someone that is willing to give you some manure, make sure the livestock are not fed with any types of grain or feed that contain chemicals. Those chemicals could be passed to the manure.

There is no question that adding manure to your home vegetable garden has tremendous benefits. Knowing where to get it, what kind to use and how to add it is just as important to know.

06
Feb

Best Plants For Your Home Garden

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A home garden makes any compound come alive. The different colors of flowers and leaves on plants add to the beauty of the environment. Home garden plants are also important as they keep the air fresh and clean. There are different types of plants suitable for your home garden. They can be vegetables, flowers or herbs. You can also mix two or more of these types of plants in a colorful way for a different look.

Whichever plant you intend to have in your garden, ensure that you have thorough knowledge of how it should be taken care of. It is good to go for plants which are not easily destroyed by termites and common weeds.

Vegetables as garden plants are excellent in that they not only make your garden look good; they also provide you with the greens to put on your table. The best vegetables include parsley, pepper and coriander among others. Herbs are increasingly becoming a popular choice of garden plant as more and more people embrace the use of herbs for food and medicinal value. They are easy to take care of in the garden. The best herbs to plant in your garden are mint, chives, lavender and tarragon among others.

Flowers are the other popular option for most home gardeners. There are flowers for all seasons to ensure that your home garden remains colorful throughout the year. There is the holly berry, tulip and amaryllis for winter; snowdrop and snowflake for spring; sunflower and marigold for summer and the sweet gum for fall.

03
Feb

Gardens – Garden Tips 7

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Hi Everyone

Yet again another great week although you can really tell the temperature is dipping over night now, as we have to clear our windscreens and it is just about time for the old sweatshirt to go on over the polo I am wearing.

Rusty our dog made me laugh the other morning. It was probably the coldest day we have had recently, and usually when it is time for me to go to work rusty comes outside with me so I can throw his ball for him a couple of times before I leave. This morning when I opened the door and the cold wind hit him he just stood there and looked up at me as to say ‘if you think I am going out there today you have another thing coming’, that is certainly the character we love about him. When I picked his ball up the temptation was just too much and out he shot like a speeding bullet.

Work wise we are just about on top of things now with the entire amount of grass cutting we have been doing. We have just completed a grass- seeding job for a landfill site – only 11 acres, just a bit larger than normal size garden. Basically it is the same process as we do for new lawns in a home garden but we are using much larger mechanical machinery.

If you are preparing your lawn at home you would first loosen up the ground with a rotovator and you would end up with fine tilth – meaning fine small granules of topsoil without large lumps. You must also remove large and small stones from the surface, rake over to get the surface as level as possible. A good tip here is to get a piece of board about 4 foot long, place on the surface and pull back towards yourself. This will help you get the ground level by taking out the humps and filling in the holes- easy hey! When you are happy with the result, step back and repeat until you have completed the whole area to be seeded.

You should now have a nice level base to sow the grass seed. Place the seed into a bucket and hold in the middle against your stomach. Now stand at the edge of the new lawn area, using your free hand grab a handful of seed, you then broadcast the seed by moving your hand forwards, outwards and across your body at the same time opening your hand up as you go. This sequence should spread the seed nice and quite evenly across the whole area. Take a step forward and repeat the process until the whole area is completed.

You can then go back and put seed on any parts you have missed or the seed is a bit thin. Next get a grass rake and rake the area over covering the grass seed with the soil. Do not worry about trying to cover all the seed, as it will still grow. You can then get your board and re-level the area in the same manner as before, if you have a garden roller you can use it to give it a light roll- but it is not essential. Now give the lawn a good sprinkling of water and leave alone.

After about two to three weeks depending on the weather you should start to see some growth. Once it starts it will soon thicken up to leave the whole area in your garden looking like a new green carpet.
Allow the grass to grow to about 2 to 3 inches long before cutting. Reduce the length of the lawn slowly, take at least three cuts over a period of three weeks to take it down to no shorter that 1 inch in height. Till next time just enjoy your gardens.

Ted & Sandra