An organic garden requires your most astute and attentive care to thrive. Gardeners need to use all the information they can to create and tend to their organic garden. This will see you cultivating healthier and better tasting results from your organic garden. Follow this advice and your organic garden will soon be flourishing above the rest!
Create useful rulers from your tool handles. You can use shovels or rakes as measuring sticks. Lay the handles onto the floor and place a measuring tape beside them. You can label distances using a permanent marker. This will allow you to have a ruler at your fingertips when you are working out in the garden.
Use perennials resistant to slugs and snails. A plant can be completely demolished overnight by slugs and snails. Certain perennials that don’t have tough leaves are especially tasty to snails and slugs. Perennials that are unappetizing in taste, or that have hardened and hairy leaves, are not a favorite of slugs or snails. Some perennial families that snails and slugs won’t eat include achillea, campanula, and helleborus.
Use climbers for covering fences and walls. Climbing plants are known to be very versatile, and can help hide any ugly wall or fence, and this often only takes one growing season. They can be trained to grow over an arbor, or through trees and shrubs that are already in the garden. Some require ties attaching them to supports, but others will attach themselves to any surface nearby. Wisteria, jasmine, honeysuckle, clematis and some rose varieties are good choices for climbers.
Transfer your favorite plants indoors to rescue them from the winter frosts. You can save the ones you spent the most money on or the ones that are resistant. Use caution when digging around the roots of your plant. You need to keep the root structure intact for it to thrive after being potted.
Do not mow your lawn close to the bottom. If you leave some of the grass when you mow, the roots grow further into the ground, which makes the grass less prone to drying and other hazards. If the grass is too short that will lead to shallow roots, which will cause a brown and dried-out lawn.
Be sure your garden is fertilized. Manure can be effective, though you should use products which minimize pathogens. You can choose from many different fertilizers. Do not worry about the kind of fertilizer you end up using but definitely put down something.
Invest in a kneeling stool, and a wheelbarrow to work in the garden. Gardening can be very tough on the knees as you spend much time leaning near the ground, so a portable stool can make all the difference to your comfort. Horticulture also typically involves transporting bags of topsoil, fertilizer and other heavy items, so using a wheelbarrow to make these tasks easier is a sound investment for your garden, and your back.
In your flower beds and garden, utilize a few inches of organic mulch. Mulch discourages weeds and helps retain moisture while adding nutrients to your flower bed. As an added bonus, a nice mulch can help make your garden look more finished.
When you run your personal organic garden, try ruffling seedlings using your hands or cardboard one or two times daily. This will sound a bit strange. However, it has been proven to cause plants to grow larger.
As you can conclude from what you have just read, having an organic garden can provide you with nutrient rich and fresh fruits and vegetables. It takes research, patience and dedication, but organic gardening is well worth every bit of effort it requires.