2010 August,My Vegetable garden.

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My Vegetable garden.
2010 August,My Vegetable garden.
Plangarden’s Web Software For Vegetable Gardeners Starts 2007 With A New Crop Of Features
Plangarden’s Web Software For Vegetable Gardeners Starts 2007 With A New Crop Of Features
Half Moon Bay, CA (PRWEB) January 30, 2007
Now in its second year, Plangarden adds features and enhancements to its vegetable garden design software that extends its capabilities while preserving its ease of use.
The most significant enhancement is the Zoom and Panning feature that now can accommodate garden sizes of up to five acres (about two hectares). Originally, Plangarden was made for small-scale home gardeners with a maximum garden size of 120×120 feet (about one-third of an acre). Navigation around large gardens is made simple through the use of a “zoom bar” similar to those used in map applications such as Yahoo! Maps.
Plangarden co-founder Giselle Stahl says, “The zoom and panning feature was added in response to user requests for large gardens. Many users have several beds, containers or plots with fruit trees within a large vegetable garden area.”
Plangarden users can quickly create odd-shaped gardens scaled in metric or imperial units to proper dimensions with the application’s drag-and-drop interface. The software eliminates any manual drawing on graph paper or CAD expertise and saves user gardens on a secure server.
Another new feature includes a Harvest Log that lets users estimate when vegetables will be ready to harvest. Gardeners can stagger their harvests to spare limited space in their fridge. In addition, users can track how much and when they harvest — a useful tool to record and look back at the results of gardening activities.
As a result of user queries regarding the best time to plant, Plangarden now features a “Know When To Plant” guide to assist in determining when to plant specific crops. The user-specified ZIP Code determines the average last day of frost and graphically displays a time window to start plants indoors and/or outdoors (at this time, only available for US-based users).
Last year, Plangarden changed the rules of vegetable garden planning by offering the first Web-based software application that allows gardeners to design, plan and manage their garden. Over 4,500 users from all over the world have discovered Plangarden, and have provided valuable input in the software’s development. Because Plangarden runs in a browser and requires no downloads, new software features can be added dynamically to respond to user requests.
Users can sign up for a free 45-day trial. A full year subscription is available for $ 20/year. System requirements: PC running IE 5.0+, Netscape 7.0+, Firefox 1.3+ with Adobe Flash 7.0+ and cookies enabled. Plangarden is designed to run at a screen resolution of 1024×768 or larger.
About Plangarden:
A privately-held company providing advanced Web-based tools designed to assist gardeners visualize, plan and record gardening activities. Plangarden focuses on creating Web applications that are powerful, yet easy to use. http://www.plangarden.com.
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Vocus, PRWeb, and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Mom’s Vegetable Garden
Mom’s Vegetable Garden

Image by Chiot’s Run
My mom has a small vegetable garden now that all of us kids are gone. She is expanding it a little each year, she took a few years off from growing vegetables, but now she’s back in full force. Those are potatoes in the big bins in the back and the raised bed in the back is filled with strawberries. In the middle she has: tomatoes, peppers, beets, peas, herbs, lettuce, and spinach. The newly tilled section is where we’re going to plant some strawberry popcorn.
A Cornucopia of Burpee?s Best Vegetable Plants Arrive for the First Time at Local Garden Centers this Spring
A Cornucopia of Burpee’s Best Vegetable Plants Arrive for the First Time at Local Garden Centers this Spring
Chadds Ford, PA (PRWEB) April 12, 2006
Finding a vegetable and herb to satisfy your appetite has never been so easy thanks to the new Burpee Gardens™ plant series.
For the first time ever, Burpee is offering 32 of its most beloved vegetables and herbs at local garden centers as part of a new and exciting plant collection.
The collection’s introduction means that local garden centers will now offer the widest selection ever available of the “best of the best” homegrown tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and other garden favorites.
“A home gardener now has 20 tomatoes instead of just three from which to choose,” says George Ball, president of Burpee. “If you are a sauce lover, a salsa lover or a BLT lover, there’s a specific tomato for your taste and cooking needs in the Burpee Gardens™ collection.”
Included in the collection are all-time favorites like the Big Boy and Brandy Boy tomatoes, Big Burpless cucumber and Butter Boy squash.
There are also some new exclusive varieties like Big Mama, the world’s largest paste tomato, and Biker Billy, the world’s largest jalapeno pepper, as well as Health Kick, the only tomato with 50% more heart healthy lycopene.
Scheduled to arrive in select Mid-Atlantic garden centers this spring, the Burpee Gardens™ collection showcases an extensive range of plants for every use and every personality, offering various colors, flavors and tastes.
The plants will be climate-conditioned, or hardened-off, before they reach the garden center, making them especially hardy for spring home gardens. Plus, they’ll be packaged in 4-inch containers to optimize home garden performance.
Burpee vegetables are an American tradition. “The Burpee name represents a long-standing commitment to quality that spans 130 years,” says Ball. “The new Burpee Gardens™ plants continue this tradition by offering hand-selected varieties that are the best available and by honing our growing skills down to a fine edge.”
Ball promises that home garden connoisseurs will notice a difference between the quality of Burpee Gardens™ plants and generic commodities usually found at the garden center. “Burpee plants are healthy, lush and ready-to-grow—not tender or stretched”.
According to Ball, Americans are eager to embrace healthy living habits. “After years of counting calories, fats and carbohydrates, the public is shifting to a more positive way of thinking about food,” he said.
“It’s our hope that Burpee Gardens™ will offer home gardeners an easier way to grow vegetables while at the same time make eating a well-balanced diet more compelling. Succulent, fresh picked, homegrown flavor is the key.”
Consumers can expect to find the Burpee Gardens™ plants in gar-den centers beginning in mid-April through May, depending on their climate. All of the plants will feature a large and colorful plant tag printed with the Burpee logo, care instructions and nutritional benefits.
Home garden devotees can visit the Burpee Gardens™ web site, http://www.burpeegardens.net for more information while growing the vegetables. The site will include planting instructions, gardening tips and recipes.
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, Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Vocus, PRWeb, and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
A New Online Resource for Vegetable Gardeners and Home Cooks
A New Online Resource for Vegetable Gardeners and Home Cooks
Cary, NC (PRWEB) September 4, 2005
Looking for a website that offers more than just the same-old, tired tips on vegetable gardening? Looking for a few new recipes to liven up dinner and possibly make your home-grown veggies a bit more interesting for your friends and family?
Fresh Cooking from your Garden, a new website, designed with the home gardener in mind, offers you a place to find good advice, tips and recipes for your garden vegetables all served up with a bit of humor.
http://www.gardenandhearth.com/gardencooking.htm
Fresh Cooking from your Garden was created by Robin Svedi. Although neither a chef, nor a master gardener, Robin is someone with over twenty years of experience under her nails, and like you, she enjoys gardening and then cooking the fruits of her labor in tasty yet simple ways.
You wonÂt find any technical jargon or difficult gardening techniques at this site. Instead, you will find simple to follow recipes, advice and tips for making things easier in your life as chief cook and tomato washer.
Whilst visiting the site, drop into the Fresh Cooking from your Garden forum, where you can ask questions, get answers, and find even more recipes from other gardening cooks, like yourself.
http://www.gardenandhearth.com/gardencooking.htm has new recipes and gardening articles posted regularly so be sure to check back often.
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, Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Vocus, PRWeb, and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Related Gardening Press Releases
Starting your Vegetable Garden – The Main Vegetable Types & What you Need to Know
If you want an abundant, productive organic vege garden then it’s important to first understand a little about the different vegetable types, and the conditions in which they thrive. Vegetables tend to be grouped into 3 main categories: fruit and seed vegetables; leaf and stem vegetables, and root and bulb vegetables, depending on the part of the plant that is most commonly eaten.
They can also be grouped according to their temperature preferences: cool season vegetables grow best at low temperatures of 50-70 deg F (10-20 deg C); warm vegetables grow best at temperatures of 70 def F (20 deg C) or above, while a third, temperate group prefers temperatures of between 60 -75 deg F (15-25 deg C). If you grow vegetables out of season then, despite your best intentions, you are doomed for disappointment as your vegetables will either fail to germinate and grow, or rapidly bolt to seed.
This article is not designed to act as a comprehensive guide to growing individual vegetables – there are many good books available that will cover these basics and that may be well tailored to your own particular climate. Instead, you will find an overview of each of these groups, and their requirements, in turn. If you do not have a vegetable gardening book then most seed packets give detailed maps or descriptions on the back, explaining the best time to plant in your area.
Fruit and seed vegetables.
This group include beans, peas, eggplants (aubergines), capsicums (bell peppers), tomatoes, sweetcorn and cucurbits (vine crops such as cucumber, zucchini (courgettes), pumpkins and squash).
As a general rule, these are warm or temperate season plants which hate frost. In colder areas they should not be planted out until early summer, but will grow quickly. Do not be tempted to plant them out too soon – you will only be frustrated at their lack of inclination to thrive.
Leaf and stem vegetables.
This group includes vegetables such as cabbages, lettuce, brussel sprouts, rhubarb, chard (silverbeet), spinach and celery. Broccoli and cauliflower are also often included in this group, although strictly we eat the flower buds, not the leaves or stems.
This group includes a range of cool and temperate weather crops which are sown in the cooler winter months or early spring.
Root and bulb vegetables.
This group includes most of the kitchen staples such as onions, shallots, carrots, potatoes, turnips and beets. Again, this group tends to include mainly cool and temperate crops, which may run to seed if planted too late in the season.
Crop rotation
The key to successful crop rotation is to keep it simple. Unless you are a commercial gardener very few people have the time or inclination to prepare complex crop rotation plans year on year.
As I have far too many things on my ‘to do’ list as it is, I keep my planting schedule as simple as possible. My approach is to divide my beds up into blocks, and then plant only one vegetable category, such as bulb vegetables, or leaf vegetables, in each block. Then the next season I move all the plantings one block to the right, so I am now planting a different vegetable category in each block. This seems to have worked well so far!
If you follow this simple guide to vegetables you should have no trouble planning a successful, disease-resistant garden to feed you and your family year round!
Fi McMurray is a garden enthusiast and author who has been gardening organically for 10 years. She has been involved with 2 award-winning gardens at the prestigious Ellerslie International Flower Show in Auckland, New Zealand.
Her latest book is “An Introduction to Successful Organic Gardening”, which joins her previous books “Successful Rose Gardening” and “Secrets to a Thriving Herb Garden”. You can find out more about Fi’s books at her website, www.fimcmurray.com
Fi lives north of Auckland, New Zealand, with her husband and two small children.
Article from articlesbase.com
Vegetable Gardening – A Fun and Productive Hobby
If you are going to take up a new hobby, you might as well do something that is productive as well as fun. One such activity is vegetable gardening. Vegetable gardening is a very relaxing activity that millions of people love to do. There is also a certain pride when you know that you can grow your own fruits and vegetables right from your own backyard. In order to become a successful vegetable gardener, though, you must have a specific plan involving the kinds of plants you want in your garden, as well as the placement of these plants.
Basic Requirements for Vegetable Gardening
A flat, level surface is necessary for vegetable gardening to ensure that the water will flow evenly, giving sufficient nourishment to all the plants in your garden. If you have an uneven terrain, some of your plants may drown while others might be dehydrated. Good soil is essential as well so make sure that you buy quality gIf you are going to take up a new hobby, you might as well do something that is productive as well as fun. One such activity is vegetable gardening. Vegetable gardening is a very relaxing activity that millions of people love to do. There is also a certain pride when you know that you can grow your own fruits and vegetables right from your own backyard. In order to become a successful vegetable gardener, though, you must have a specific plan involving the kinds of plants you want in your garden, as well as the placement of these plants.
Basic Requirements for Vegetable Gardening
A flat, level surface is necessary for vegetable gardening to ensure that the water will flow evenly, giving sufficient nourishment to all the plants in your garden. If you have an uneven terrain, some of your plants may drown while others might be dehydrated. Good soil is essential as well so make sure that you buy quality garden soil that is packed with sufficient minerals for the healthy growth of your vegetables.
Choosing the type of vegetables you want to plant in your garden is the fun part. There are hundreds of vegetables you can choose from, but make sure the ones you pick are well adapted to the particular environment and climate in your area. Most vegetables are actually very easy to cultivate if you provide them all their growth requirements.
Planning is very important for the success of your vegetable gardening venture. You need to at least have a general idea of where you want to place your different vegetables in relation to each other. Using pots is a good idea so you can rearrange your garden if the need arises. Of course, your options will be limited if you have a small garden space but if you have a large area to work with, your gardening options are limitless.
One more important element that all vegetable gardeners find very important is the elimination and prevention of garden pests. There are many organic pesticides that you can use to solve this problem without inflicting any damage to your crops.
If you have a little more open space at home, you can go for regular home vegetable gardening as well. This is a more structured type of gardening in which you can lay out your garden more systematically than when you are using random containers.
If you live in a cramped apartment or high-rise condominium where there is no backyard to plant in, you have to use your creativity in order to create your own indoor garden. You can use any kind of containers to serve as an improvised garden plot and place this near a window in order to get as much sunlight as possible.
When it comes to productive hobbies, nothing can be better than vegetable gardening. Not only will vegetable gardening provide you with fresh vegetables to serve your family, but it also has therapeutic and relaxing effects on your body and mind. Regardless of what kind of vegetable gardening you choose, planting your own vegetables will definitely be much healthier and cheaper than purchasing them from the local grocery store.arden soil that is packed with sufficient minerals for the healthy growth of your vegetables.
Choosing the type of vegetables you want to plant in your garden is the fun part. There are hundreds of vegetables you can choose from, but make sure the ones you pick are well adapted to the particular environment and climate in your area. Most vegetables are actually very easy to cultivate if you provide them all their growth requirements.
Planning is very important for the success of your vegetable gardening venture. You need to at least have a general idea of where you want to place your different vegetables in relation to each other. Using pots is a good idea so you can rearrange your garden if the need arises. Of course, your options will be limited if you have a small garden space but if you have a large area to work with, your gardening options are limitless.
One more important element that all vegetable gardeners find very important is the elimination and prevention of garden pests. There are many organic pesticides that you can use to solve this problem without inflicting any damage to your crops.
If you live in a cramped apartment or high-rise condominium where there is no backyard to plant in, you have to use your creativity in order to create your own indoor garden. You can use any kind of containers to serve as an improvised garden plot and place this near a window in order to get as much sunlight as possible.
When it comes to productive hobbies, nothing can be better than vegetable gardening. Not only will vegetable gardening provide you with fresh vegetables to serve your family, but it also has therapeutic and relaxing effects on your body and mind.
Elizabeth T James is a freelance journalist and publisher. For more handy gardening tips on vegetable gardening go to Gardening Facts Online
Article from articlesbase.com
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The Garden Defender: 21st-Century Animal-Proof Fencing For Vegetable Gardens
Horsham, PA (PRWEB) November 28, 2006
Who doesn’t enjoy watching timid, cute wildlife in their backyard or on their small farm? To them, however, they’re merely foraging for an easy-to-find, tasty lunch in your garden. The garden you have labored over to provide fresh fruits and vegetables for you and your family has become the local restaurant for neighborhood wildlife.
Well, the free lunch is over for Bambi the deer and Thumper the rabbit as well as for their other furry friends.
Garden enthusiasts Bob Hannigan and Amit Doshi, co-founders of The Garden Defender Company, have announced today the launch of their new, animated website at GardenDefender.com, making available the easily-installed all-metal Garden Defender fence against deer, rabbit and rodent infestation of small and area gardens.
The uniquely designed Garden Defender is a sleek, secure, attractive, inexpensive and easy-to-install garden enclosure fence that offers the first complete fencing solution for vegetable and flower gardens. According to Bob Hannigan, “We try to make gardening a little more rewarding and maintenance free. All gardeners are looking for solutions and more free time and this is our focus.”
The animation at GardenDefender.com quickly and clearly illustrates the ease of installation or removal of the Garden Defender. The system is modular and fits whatever size is your garden. There is no clumsy, unattractive chicken wire to unravel, nor are there large stakes to hammer into place. Hannigan says, “The innovative Garden Defender is a great value as it provides an effective and built-to-last animal proof solution. Use our fences to keep deer, rabbits and rodents out of your vegetable garden and away from tender seedlings. Assembling or disassembling the Garden Defender is a 10-minute process.”
The Garden Defender is currently marketed only through GardenDefender.com. As for future plans, Hannigan notes, “We launch our products on the Internet which is a fantastic medium to tell the product story. Customers have time to look and examine for however long they would like. Our marketing strategy will be Internet first and retail to follow. Selling products via the Internet is how we gained success.”
Ordering Garden Defender through the website is a secure process where your credit card data is protected. The security system uses the Paypal service. Customers do not have to subscribe to Paypal services to purchase the product through Paypal. The FAQ link on the website explains the simple shipping and handling procedure.
For specific questions, contact The Garden Defender Company by email or call Bob at 908-284-2160 or Amit at 215-441-0911.
Garden Defender Company
415 Sargon Way, Suite G
Horsham, PA 19044
215-441-0911 (Amit)
908-284-2160 (Bob)
http://GardenDefender.com
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Vegetable Gardening Is a Hobby That Can Save You Money
Vegetable gardening is actually practiced by a few for money by most for the type of satisfaction it provides. Doing a bit of vegetable gardening, having your own vegetable backyard up and then while using fresh vegetables directly from your personal garden for your dinner, is a pleased experience that can be recognized and felt only if you do it on your own. Vegetable gardening is extremely relaxing activity which millions of people such as. There is also a particular pride when you know that you could grow your personal fruits and vegetables from your own yard. Vegetable gardening is actually ideal because it brings together regular gardening along with harvesting your own meals and saving money. The actual keys to an effective vegetable garden consist of planning ahead, understanding exactly what veggies you want to grow and can grow in your area, and including blossoms in your veggie garden for some colour.
Vegetable gardening is actually way more enjoyable than mowing the actual lawn! Vegetable gardening is actually no different than developing herbs or blossoms and if the correct steps are used and the vegetation is give the good care they will prosper and produce really tasty vegetables. Growing vegetables is a ability that can be discovered, and through exercise you will get much better. Throughout our web site you will find the garden tips as well as vegetable seeds that will help you grow your personal vegetable gardens.
Growing vegetables is not that costly to start and also the taste of home made veggies definitely outperform that of grocery store vegetables. Your growing vegetables days will be filled with produce if you take the correct precautions when growing and continue upkeep of your garden. Growing vegetables is very simple, but yet in some way refined. If you devote the effort, you are usually rewarded having a bountiful harvest. Growing vegetables is great enjoyable in early springtime when the weather conditions are cool and following we have invested most of the winter season imagining what the next garden will look like. I recieve excited about developing stuff that season and can’t wait around to get the tiller out and search in.
Vegetable gardening is actually no different than developing herbs or blossoms and if the correct steps are used and the vegetation is give the good care they will prosper and produce really tasty vegetables. Growing vegetables is not that costly to start and also the taste of home made veggies definitely outperform that of grocery store vegetables. Your growing vegetables days will be filled with produce if you take the correct precautions when growing and continue upkeep of your garden. Growing vegetables is not just regarding raising produce for that table, though that’s important. It is also regarding digging in the planet and coaxing seed products and transplants to create healthy veggies.
Growing vegetables is a organic way to supply healthy foods on your own or an entire loved ones. It is a price-effective, healthy way to give food to everyone. Vegetable gardening is actually honest work that will help mould somebody in to an honest lower-to–earth person. Growing vegetables is a great way to function that! With less than a investment, you can save 100′s of dollars this summer in your grocery bill!
Growing vegetables is back popular. The desire with regard to locally grown create, combined with financial pressures, has influenced homeowners to find out their yards. Growing vegetables is a well-liked pastime for many people within Florida. In addition to being enjoyable, the vegetables simply seem to flavor better when they are homegrown.
Find out how to save money when gardening vegetables at the Organic Gardening Academy site. Go to www.EasyOrganicGardening.net for more information
Article from articlesbase.com
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Vegetable Gardening For Beginners – 6 Easy Tips To Start You Off
Healthy vegetable gardens do more than provide a beautiful area in your yard. They repay your labor with nutritious food and a healthy varied diet. Vegetable gardeners are in tune with the environment, giving back to the soil what they take from it. Abundant vegetable gardens start with healthy, rich soil. Compost and mulch contribute to that natural wealth.
About 11,000 years ago, the first farmers began to select and cultivate desired food plants in the southwest Asian Fertile Crescent – between the ancient Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. Although we believe there was some use of wild cereals before that time, the earliest crops were barley, bitter vetch, chick peas, flax, lentils, peas, emmer, and wheat. About 9,000 years ago, Egyptians began to grow wheat and barley. About the same time, farmers in the Far East began to grow rice, soy, mung, azuki, and taro.
Then, about 7,000 years ago, ancient Sumarians established the first organized agricultural practices that made large-scale farming possible. Of particular note, they established irrigation as a way to nurture crops where none were possible before. Vegetable gardeners today use many of the same techniques established in early history. But today’s vegetable gardeners have millennia of experience behind them. Trial and error today is success or failure at the margins. Failure is not disaster.
As in centuries passed, a successful vegetable gardener cultivates the garden before planting for three main reasons: to eliminate weeds, to distribute air and nutrients throughout the soil, and to conserve moisture. Preparation of the soil is the single most important step in assuring abundant harvests.
Weeds are the most powerful enemy of a healthy vegetable garden. Letting them multiply in your vegetable garden will create much work and disappointment through the growing season. And when your vegetables begin to grow, removing weeds can your new vegetable plants beyond repair. Weeds also steal the precious nutrients necessary to produce healthy vegetables.
Rather than sacrificing the new garden to a patch of weeds, the successful vegetable gardener will cultivate the bed often, breaking up the soil to maintain healthy air, moisture, and heat to facilitate desirable chemical processes that produce abundant plant food. Ancient growers learned by trial and error the importance of keeping the soil loose around young plants. Early farmers deposited rotten fish beneath their crops as fertilizer and then used tools of shell and stone to nurture healthy soil and get plentiful air to the roots of their crops.
As important as air is water, even when the vegetable garden is a promise waiting for new seeds. Consider the process of “capillary attraction” – the ability of a substance to pull another substance into it. When you dip one end of a strip of blotting paper into water, you’ll see that the moisture moves up the invisible channels formed by the paper’s texture. But when you place the side edge of the blotting paper into water, the moisture won’t move upward. In a vegetable garden, capillary attraction describes the attraction of water molecules to soil particles. Well cultivated, loose soil maximizes capillary action, maintaining an even distribution of moisture throughout your vegetable garden soil.
Even so, water stored in soil during rain immediately begins to escape, evaporating into the air. Surface water is the first to vaporize into the atmosphere. With capillary action, sub-surface water moves upward and evaporates. Left to natural processes, your garden will lose its moisture as quickly as if you left sponges in the topsoil. Cultivating your vegetable garden by hoeing the soil around your plants disturbs natural capillary action and slows the loss of water for your vegetables.
It’s important to hoe your vegetable garden often, particularly those areas not shaded, at the very least every other week. If this seems too difficult, using a wheel hoe will reduce your labor and keep your vegetable garden healthy and productive. Looking somewhat like an old-fashioned plow, the wheel hoe allows you to cultivate very close to your healthy plants, maintaining an even depth and destroying new weeds before they get established. With the wheel hoe, you can cultivate as fast as you can walk.
If you wait until weeds are established, you’ll have to pull the weeds by hand, damaging the root systems of your vegetables, depleting the soil of nutrients, and creating a much greater workload for you as gardener. And the work you invest will not be to cultivate a productive crop. It will be to prevent damage that may have already been done. A wheel hoe is essential for a large vegetable garden, but it will also save much time and effort in a small one. However, a simple scuffle hoe is effective in small spaces as well. It takes less storage space and cultivates the soil effectively.
Preparing your vegetable garden properly before you plant vegetables is well worth the investment in time and labor. Keeping your vegetable garden rows free of weeds later on is slow going and difficult. Here are a few tips for keeping your vegetable garden clean and clear of weeds as your plants mature:
1. Work at the weeds while the ground is soft and/or moist. Soon after a rain is the best time. Weeds will come out by the root easier without breaking off, leaving the unwanted plant to grow again.
2. Just before you weed your vegetable garden, cultivate the rows with your wheel or scuffle hoe very shallow in the topsoil and as close to your vegetable plants as possible. This will loosen the soil and make weeds easy to see. A double-wheel hoe with discs is best for this purpose, especially for large plants.
3. Make sure all of the soil is loosened when you cultivate. Pull all the weeds out carefully, avoiding disturbing the vegetable plants. Your weeder will destroy weed seedlings, but you’ll have to hand-weed near plant bases and where weeds have matured.
4. Use a small hand-weeder near your vegetable plants. It will loosen the soil, making weeds easier to eliminate, and save a lot of wear and tear on your hands and fingers.
5. Practice with your wheel hoe. At first, watch the wheel’s direction and the pressure you put on the handles. The discs or rakes will follow automatically, maintaining an appropriate cultivation depth in your vegetable garden rows.
6. “Hilling” was once a common way to nurture young vegetable plants. This is done by building the soil up around the stems of young vegetable plants, usually the after you’ve hoed your garden two or three times. In wet soils or dry climates, hilling may still be the way to go. But in most areas, level soil is best. It makes it easier to cultivate the soil in the long run, thereby assuring healthy vegetable plants through the growing season.
Rotating Vegetable Crops
Crop rotation, or growing different vegetable crops each time you plant, is an important part of maintaining a healthy, productive vegetable garden. Some Roman texts mention crop rotation, and early Asian and African farmers also found rotation a productive method. During the Muslim Golden Age of Agriculture, engineers and farmers introduced today’s modern crop rotation methods where they alternated winter and summer crops and left fields fallow during some growing seasons. With Chemical Revolution of the mid-20th Century, crop rotation lost some of its appeal. But for home vegetable gardeners, rotation eliminates the risks of using dangerous chemicals and prevents the environmental consequences associated with modern pollutants.
Each different vegetable plant depletes the soil of different nutrients, and each leaves different nutrients as its roots and stems decay. Rotating crops with each planting keeps the soil balanced and rich. Planting the same crop time after time drains it of necessary nutrients, leaving it less productive. Crop rotation also reduces the build-up of pathogens and pests that destroy healthy vegetable gardens. Rotation helps maintain a healthy mix of essential nitrogen in your vegetable garden.
Rotating crops is more important with vegetables like cabbage, but it is a good practice for your vegetable garden generally. Even the hardy onion benefits from rotation, especially if you’ve done a good job of breaking up the old garden soil and mixing the remaining vegetable plants to serve as compost for the following crop. Here are some basic tips about crop rotation:
1. Do not rotate crops of the same vegetable family, for example turnips and cabbage. Be sure the following crop is a complete different type of vegetable.
2. Deep-rooting crops like carrots or parsnips, should follow vegetables with roots near the surface like onions or lettuce.
3. Follow root crops with vines or leaf crops.
4. Rotate vegetable plants that have long growing seasons with quick-growing crops.
5. Decide on your vegetable garden rotation when you’re constructing your planting plan. Making these decisions in the middle of the growing season will be more difficult and waste time and money.
Abhishek is an avid Gardening enthusiast and he has got some great Gardening Secrets up his sleeves! Download his FREE 57 Pages Ebook, “Your Garden – Neighbor’s Envy, Owner’s Pride!” from his website http://www.Gardening-Master.com/762/index.htm . Only limited Free Copies available.
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