Organic gardening is using nature to grow your plants without the use of chemical commercial fertilizers and pesticides while benefitting from conservation and preservation of soil and water purity. Today's society is now learning to use dish soaps, bath soaps, and laundry detergents that are save for ground water as the pruity of drinking water is now in the public's eye once again.Organic gardening is not a new method of gardening but one that has been around long before the use of chemicals came to be used in the garden. You may have seen them when you went to your grandparents home and never realized that they were using organic gardening.
Organic gardening is not a new concept but an old gardening method that has found a new generation of gardeners wanting to protect their soil and to conserve nature as much as possible by not interrupting the cycle of nature. Vegetable are the most common method of organic gardening when you think of using natural methods to garden. You actually use a mixture of natural remedies to help control pests, plant diseases and moisture problems without using chemicals.
Organic gardening and soil conditioning go hand in hand. The first thing you should do is check your soil conditions. Depending on where you live and what kind of plants you are planning on growing will decide what you need to do to condition your soil for growing your plants. You may need to add bonemeal, potash, sand, manure , peat or organic compost to your soil to improve its condition. You'll need to know if your soil is hard clay, sandy, rich black soil, acidic or a mixture to find out what you may have to add to it to improve its growing conditions for your plants. You'll also need to know how well it maintains moisture.
Organic gardening also makes use of natural ways to combat insects. An entire host of ways exist that use everyday ingredients like garlic, cayenne ppeper, cinnamon and even lemon or orange peel to use against insects. Ladies bugs, praying mantis and predatory wasps are established organic garden methods of controlling insect pests.
Mulching is an important step in organic gardening or really any gardening as it helps the plants stay watered and also acts as a shade barrier for their roots as they establish themselves in the garden. Another benefit to mulching is that it can act as a weed barrier and make keeping your garden weed free a lot easier for you and it makes a neat clean walking path to reach your plants but best of all at the end of the season or in between crops the mulch can be tilled under to help improve the soil.
Organic gardening is not a new concept but an old gardening method that has found a new generation of gardeners wanting to protect their soil and to conserve nature as much as possible by not interrupting the cycle of nature. Vegetable are the most common method of organic gardening when you think of using natural methods to garden. You actually use a mixture of natural remedies to help control pests, plant diseases and moisture problems without using chemicals.
Organic gardening and soil conditioning go hand in hand. The first thing you should do is check your soil conditions. Depending on where you live and what kind of plants you are planning on growing will decide what you need to do to condition your soil for growing your plants. You may need to add bonemeal, potash, sand, manure , peat or organic compost to your soil to improve its condition. You'll need to know if your soil is hard clay, sandy, rich black soil, acidic or a mixture to find out what you may have to add to it to improve its growing conditions for your plants. You'll also need to know how well it maintains moisture.
Organic gardening also makes use of natural ways to combat insects. An entire host of ways exist that use everyday ingredients like garlic, cayenne ppeper, cinnamon and even lemon or orange peel to use against insects. Ladies bugs, praying mantis and predatory wasps are established organic garden methods of controlling insect pests.
Mulching is an important step in organic gardening or really any gardening as it helps the plants stay watered and also acts as a shade barrier for their roots as they establish themselves in the garden. Another benefit to mulching is that it can act as a weed barrier and make keeping your garden weed free a lot easier for you and it makes a neat clean walking path to reach your plants but best of all at the end of the season or in between crops the mulch can be tilled under to help improve the soil.

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