
You have many options available to enable you to grow a vivacious and colorful organic garden of your very own. You just need to learn them and use them.
The quick and drastic change in the weather conditions can shock your plants and cause them to die. It’s important that you gradually change temperate conditions over time, so that your plants can adjust. Try to place them in the new area for a couple of hours at a time the first day. Gradually increase the the time they spend outside over a one week period. After a week’s time, the plants should be fine staying outside.
Clay is naturally hard, and can can stick to a shovel making it frustrating to work with. Try applying a coat of wax onto your spade prior to working with clay soil, and then buff the spade head with a cloth. The wax will help keep dirt from sticking to the shovel, and will also keep the metal from rusting.
Plant slug-proof perennials. Slugs or snails can kill a plant very quickly. Young plants with smooth and tender leaves are their favorite. Others, though, are disliked by slugs and snails. Those with rough leaves or an unappetizing taste will be less desired by slugs and snails. Achillea, euphorbia, helleborus, heuchera and campanula are good choices that slugs don’t like.
Flower Beds
Plant annuals and biennials to make your flower beds brighter. Annuals and biennials that grow quickly can really wake up your flower beds, and they allow you to have a new garden look every season or every year, if you choose to. You can fill any spaces between shrubs and perennials when they are in the sun. Notable collections include sunflower, marigold, hollyhock, rudbeckia, cosmos, and petunia.
Grow some wheat grass or catnip for your cat to eat instead. In addition, you could put an item on the soil’s top around the plants which has a smell that cats hate, such as citrus peel or mothballs.
Get some gardening knee pads if you find yourself kneeling on the ground a lot to do your horticulture. Your knees will take a beating if you spend a great deal of time on the ground while tending your garden. Knee pads offer your knees the extra cushioning they need to stay comfortable during extended periods in the garden.
Divide your irises. Overgrown clumps of irises can be divided up to increase your numbers of this lovely flower. If you notice a dead foliage, lift the bulb. The bulbs will then split naturally in the palm of your hand and if they’re re-planted, they can flower next year. For plants with rhizomes, use a knife to divide them. New pieces should be cut from the outside, then the old center you want to discard. At the least, each piece will need to have one strong offshoot. Do this cutting beside your garden bed, so that you can place your new groupings into the ground immediately.
You can use natural materials or other plants in your garden to keep away pests. For example, if you plant onions or marigolds along the edges of your vegetable garden, you can ward off slugs. Wood ash can be used as mulch, and if put on the base of shrub and tree seedlings, will keep insects away. Using these natural methods will reduce the need for potentially harmful chemical pesticides.
Use horticulture to relax. There are a variety of ways to achieve a state of inner peace. Gardening on a sunday afternoon is a simple method of making this happen. There are numerous returns based on a very small monetary investment. The biggest perk of horticulture is the sense of satisfaction you get from what you grow with your own two hands.
Be smart about how you water your garden. You can water efficiently by using a soaker hose which will eliminate the necessity of watering each plant one by one with a nozzle, or having to use a water can that you have to refill over and over. Turn the water on at low pressure so your delicate plants will not be damaged by the soaker hose. Set the soaker hose to water your all your plants over a couple hours, and then you will be free to get other things done.
Organic Horticulture
If you want to maximize your success at organic horticulture, you need to learn as much as you can about how to garden. These tips on organic horticulture are here to guide you on the right path.