Organic Vegetables Gardening
amateur gardening?
does anyone know if it’s easy enough to begin an Organic Vegetable Garden in your own back yard??
Gardening is hard work, but it is satisfying. You need to chose a sunny part of your yard, some shade during the day is fine. You need to figure out what size you want. Then you need to till the spot up that you want to garden, you will need to go over this spot a few times to make sure the garden isn’t lumpy and no weeds. and once this is done you need to stake off each row. You can go to the toy department and get kite string. This works great for staking off the rows and you will need a measuing tape , to measure from row to row and you will need to do this to make sure you can get in between the rows will a tiller to till up the weeds when your garden planted . Then you need to go to the flowers nursey’s to buy the plants you want to grow..or the seeds..fallow the directions on the seeds packets closely. then you will need to decide on where you want to plant your veggies (which rows). I always do tallest to smallest. Dont start out with a large garden, it can be over whelming at times..Once everything is planted, if you grow Tomatoes or a certain kind of bean they need to be staked so they dont lay on the grownd and rot, you will need to water the garden everyday or every other day, dont let it go much more then that. you can also plant some flowers in your veggie garden. but once the weeds start to grow you will need to get a garden ho and chop up all the weeds probably at least twice a week. you can also lay wood mulch down under all the veggies to keep the weeds out, the water can get in but weeds wont grow. then just sit back and watch it grow..i use mircale grow spikes and then i use mircale grow liquid feeder also, i also have to use 7 dust to keep the bugs off of the veggies cause they will eat them and destroy them.
supply list..
shovel,,, mircale grow
hoe… 7 dust for bugs
rake …. water hose
tiller … mulch..but not nesessary
kite string … measuring tape
plants … a little hand shovel to help plant the veggies
Organic Vegetables Gardening

Organic Gardening for Beginners – What You Ought to Know About Setting Up a Lush Organic Vegetable Garden
I’m sure you’re aware of the tremendous amount of information and guides available on the internet pertaining to organic gardening for beginners.
And if you have managed to wade through some of that information, you’d realise by now that starting an organic vegetable garden takes a TREMENDOUS amount of hard, sweat dripping-work…
But, there’s good news!
What you ought to know right now is that setting up an organic vegetable garden that produces some of the most rounded and juiciest tomatoes, tasty pumpkins, potatoes, cucumber, cabbage, etc can be simple and near effortless once you have the proper techniques in place.
You see, what I’m about to share is without a shred of doubt, the finest method of organic gardening for beginners. Trust me, when it come to making an organic vegetable garden, I can say that I’ve been there, done that!
External note: For visual persons, overview of this technique is presented via video format. It can be seen by simply clicking on this link.
You just name it okay…Things like cycling crops – a technique which many dedicated gardeners employ to avoid the diminution of certain minerals in the soil. Resting the garden beds and planting green manure crop for the purpose of adding nitrogen and so on.
Of course, there are the typical gardening tasks like applying chemicals to ward off pests, digging soil, pulling out weeds, etc.
So there you go. The work it takes to set up an organic vegetable garden and maintaining it so that it would flourish maximally is tremendous.
However, if you build a vegetable garden using principles and techniques of ecological gardening, you absolutely DO NOT have to perform all those physical numbing tasks.
Yes indeed…ecological organic gardening for beginners is the way forward and it works like a charm.
See, the truth is in ecological gardening, you need not spend more than 8 hours per year tending to your garden plot. The majority of the work is done during the set up process.
What ecological gardening does is imitate the workings of natural ecosystem… Creating an organic vegetable that produces far more food than traditional gardening techniques and needs far less maintenance activities.
The primary rules of setting up an ecological organic garden are as follows…
You need to plant many varieties of edible plants in a very dense arrangement to prevent weeds from growing in niche spaces.
The vast number of edible plants planted compactly will help increase nitrogen quantity, thus eliminates the need for planting green manure crop. This also acts as a natural form of pests’ management.
Compost is generously applied on bare areas to fortify soil structure and also for topping up nitrogen.
Some plants are permitted to go to seed to further prevent weeds from growing. When a niche space appears due to harvesting or consumption, another edible plant will take up the space.
The finest technique of organic gardening for beginners has gotten easier to setup thanks to a set of easy to follow video tutorials. Make sure you watch the downloadable videos on how to set it up properly and also print out the detailed step-by-step manual.
Download details for videos and manual can be found by following this link:
http://www.growingorganicfood.info
About the Author
Rob Ethrington
What does “organic” garden or “organic” vegetables mean?
Absolutely no chemicals! When you use chemicals to garden, you end up eating those chemicals as well. You will find that the taste of organic verses chemical gardening is outstanding. No comparison.
There is also heirloom organic…I will use tomatoes as an example. Tomato plants have been genetically altered to produce more and for better looks. (Beefsteaks, Early girl, etc…) But the Brandy wine, my favorite, has not been altered. It is the same tomato plant that our forefathers have grown. And the taste…..All I can say is that you have never had a tomato until you taste an organic brandy wine.
Growing Wine Grapes and an Organic Vegetable Garden at Kendall Jackson Winery