Designing Your Organic Vegetable Garden

Author: admin  //  Category: Gardening Tips

All types of gardens can be improved by putting some careful thought into your organic vegetable garden design. Gardens can have many different purposes. You may want to have some essential features in your garden for the specific purpose you have in mind. Perhaps a shed, a path or a vegetable plot might fit into your plans. You will have a better idea of the area you have for planting once you can see what the overall plan looks like. You can enjoy all of the fruits, vegetables, or flowers you would like in a garden that is well planned and your plants are in the proper place. Here you will find some useful considerations that are fundamental to success when planning your organic vegetable garden design.

If you have not had a garden before, it is best to start with a small piece of land rather than a large area. Start by growing vegetables that have a short lifespan or are not available in stores where you live. Once you have some experience you can expand to a larger area to match your diet and taste. Grow plants that work well together during the growing season. One crop can be harvested, and another one can be put in its place. The preceding crop can even fertilize the next one.

The climate where you live is another important consideration. Choose plants that mature more quickly if you live in a cold climate where the growing season is short or consider using a greenhouse. Grow vegetables that are well suited for your area. For example, some varieties of dry bean will grow well in more temperate climates but will produce poorly in hot humid areas. Choose the variety that will fit your particular climate, location and soil type for best results.

As you work in your garden throughout the growing season you will notice that some of your plants are thriving and doing very well. You may want to save the seeds from these plants for planting next year, because these are the plants that do well with the climate and soil conditions in your area. You might want to save the seeds from your favorite plants because of their flavor, color or time of harvest. By saving seeds you can get a harvest that will be reliable over an extended period of time.

Factors like soil, sun, moisture and nutrients will have an influence on where plants will grow best. Once your plants are well placed and are healthy you will have the benefit of experiencing fewer problems with pests or diseases. Healthy plants are also able to tolerate adverse conditions such as drought or flood better than plants that are struggling.

Sometimes the best place to start getting ideas for your garden is to look around your own neighborhood. What do you see in someone’s yard that strikes your imagination as you drive by? Public gardens are a good place to visit to get some ideas for your garden. Visiting these places will show you which plants will thrive in your climate. Notice things like plant groupings and color combinations in a garden to get some possibilities for your own planting design. Another good place to look for ideas is in magazines and gardening catalogs.

Gardening can be a very enjoyable and satisfying hobby. You will benefit from your garden for many years to come. Make gardening a pleasurable experience for your whole family.

By Julie Lyn

No Room for a Vegetable Garden?

Author: admin  //  Category: Gardening Tips

Because of the uncertain economic uncertainties and due to the health alarms caused by the lax government oversight of our food suppliers, many families are now growing their own fruits and vegetables and raising their own live stock and food animals. The National Gardening Association reports that over 7 million households are now doing their own food cultivation. The major seed nurseries report a huge surge in the sales of seeds and seedlings. Jarden Home Sales, the maker of Ball and Kerr home canning supplies, has reported similar upswings in their sales as well.

Urban gardeners who wish to join this movement often have a particularly difficult time finding space to grow a few vegetables from their personal gardens, so you have to think outside the box – you may be surprised at how much space is available for your efforts

There are several options available to create space for your urban garden. Most of these options can be combined or you may have to settle on just one garden style depending on the circumstances. Some options are as follows:

Raised Bed or Square Foot Gardening
Container Gardening
Indoor Gardening or Hydroponic Gardening
Lasagna or No-Dig Gardening
Straw Bale Gardening
Vertical Gardening

Raised bed gardening or square foot gardening is an intensive gardening system meaning the plants are planted close to each other. This creates a high yield garden with the various species of plants easily rotated so that a continuous supply of ripe produce is ready to be picked.

Container gardening is the growing of your plants in virtually any sort of container. The only requirements are drainage, is the container big enough to hold your plants and can the container be easily moved if necessary.

Indoor Gardening and Hydroponic Gardening can easily be utilized in most locations where there absolutely no outdoor space Using grow lights is a basic way to approach this manner of growing plants and this system can easily be expanded as required or needed. The other major method is hydroponics in which the plants are grown in a soilless environment with the nutrients being delivered by a liquid such as water that has added nutrients and minerals.

Lasagna or No- Dig Gardening has nothing to do with pasta or the Italian entrée, it is simply a method of layering organic materials such as straw, manure, compost, dead vegetation and food scraps to create a rich and fertile planting bed.

Straw Bale Gardening utilizes treated straw or hay bales as the growing medium. This system is quick and easy to implement and you can create a vegetable garden right in the middle of your driveway if you so desire.

Vertical Gardening is building or utilizing structures around the garden so that the plants will grow up instead of sprawl on the ground. This option can be implemented with any of the above systems, to create more growing room.

By Richard Murray