Organic Garden Tips Image Home and Garden Center
Google
Categories

Getting Started: Five Organic Garden Tips for Beginners



If you're just getting started in organic gardening, it's easy to get overwhelmed with information. They key to success is KISS keep it slow and simple. Like all living processes, there is a rhythm to organic gardening. You don't do everything at once. Start out slow and learn as you go, and you will be successful. These five simple organic garden tips will help you get started.

Organic Garden Tip #1: Start with the Soil.

The soil is the source of life for an organic gardener. Indeed, one of the problems with chemical gardening is that it sterilizes the soil, stealing the life from it. Organic soil is living, and has lots of living matter in it. Here's an organic garden tip specific to soil: The most important word in organic gardening is compost. Buy it until you can make it.

Compost is created out of living vegetable matter. You just save all your vegetable scraps, lawn clippings and other fresh vegetable matter (green material) and mix it with dead grass and leaves (brown material) and let it decompose. You want a compost heap to generate heat, because it decomposes faster that way. It needs to be at least 3'x 3'x 3' to get good and hot. A hot compost heap that is turned frequently (so that it gets air into it) will make compost in a matter of weeks. If your compost pile isn't that big or doesn't get very warm, it will still create good compost; it'll just take longer.

Add compost to the soil at least twice a year and dig it into the top six inches of soil, and you'll have rich, dark, productive soil within a couple of years even if you started out with sterile, gray, chemically treated dirt.

Organic Garden Tip #2: Biodiversity

When you grow the same crop in the same soil over and over again, it depletes the soil of specific nutrients. Monoculture farming has caused serious damage to the soil over much of America's farmland. Monoculture farming also tends to gather the bugs and weeds that prey on that particular crop.

Biodiversity, on the other hand, means growing lots of different things. This protects the soil and the crops. Companion plants provide nutrients and pest protection for each other. Crop rotation keeps the soil rich, you don't attract as many insects and you have a greater variety of produce for your table or for sale.



Organic Garden Tip #3: Water Carefully

Indiscriminate watering practices waste water and wash soil components into the water supply. Using water carefully prevents waste and discourages weeds. Water early in the morning and use a soaker hose to keep water on the plants and nowhere else.

Organic Garden Tip #4: Control Weeds

Controlling weeds with organic gardening is easy if you follow a few simple practices.

It is important to mulch around your plants to keep weeds out and water in and to give them extra nutrients. Compost is great mulch. Use plastic barriers during growing season to keep weeds out of your crops. Cover the entire area with plastic during the winter season to kill off weed seeds. Weed often so that the weeds don't develop root systems or go to seed.

Organic Garden Tip #5: Control Pests

Pest control in organic gardens is a step-wise process. You start with the least toxic intervention and proceed from there.

The first step is to plant wisely; use companion planting and crop rotation to discourage pests before they arrive. The next step is to remove the pests by hand, if possible. Tomato hornworms, potato bugs and other larger insects can be controlled by hand.

Use barriers, like diatomaceous earth, coffee cans or netting. Use insect controls and then release ladybugs, lacewings or praying mantises into your garden. If all else fails, use an organic insecticide, such as soap.

If you start out with these five simple organic garden tips, you will have a successful first year of organic gardening. Next year, you'll be an experienced organic gardener, and you can try some different approaches. These organic garden tips will, however, get you started and ensure that your first organic garden is productive.









More Organic Gardening Articles

What You Will Find in Books on Organic Gardening

What to Look for in Bulk Organic Herbs

Made for Small Spaces: Organic Container Gardening

Organic Flowers: An Earth-Friendly Solution for Your Flower Needs

Return of Gardening - Thanks to the Organic Garden

Basic Elements of Organic Garden Design

Starting With Soil: Organic Garden Fertilizer

No Chemicals: Organic Garden Pest Control

Heritage and Hybrid Organic Garden Seeds

Where to Find Organic Garden Supply

Getting Started: Five Organic Garden Tips for Beginners

Where Do You Go to Get Organic Gardening Advice?

Three Advantages of Organic Gardening and Farming

How to Make Organic Gardening Compost

Saving Lives with Organic Gardening Pest Control

Benefits of Buying Organic Gardening Products

What Organic Gardening Supplies Do You Need?

Maintaining Organic Gardens

Growing an Organic Herb Garden

Indoor Gardening and Organic Herb Garden Lighting

Using Organic Herb Seeds in Your Organic Garden

Where Can You Find Organic Herb Suppliers?

Things You Can Do With Organic Herbs

Why Switch to Organic Plant Food?

Growing Organic Plants Indoors

The Joy of an Organic Salad Garden

The Benefits of an Organic Vegetable Garden

Plant Your Own Organic Vegetable Gardening

Planning For Organic Vegetable Gardening











Organic Gardening Home

Automotive
Antique Cars
Car Accessories
Car Insurance
Defensive Driving
Electric Scooters
GPS
RVs

Home Appliances
Air Purifiers
Coffee Makers
Juicers
Kitchen Appliances
Vacuum Cleaners

Home Electronics
Alarm Systems
Broadband
HDTV
Home Cinema
Home Security
Home Theater
Portable Generators
Satellite TV
Solar Power

Home Decorating
Aquariums
Bathroom Decor
Blinds
Candles
Clocks
Decor
Incense
Interior Design
Kitchen Decor

Home Remodeling
Bathroom Remodeling
Cabinets
Flooring
Home Improvement
Laminate Flooring
Painting
Remodeling
Remodeling a Kitchen
Roofing

Lawn and Garden
Bird Houses
Bonsai
Fountains
Garden Hedge
Garden Tools
Gardening
Gardening Tips
Gardens
Hot Tubs
Hydroponics
Landscaping
Lawn Care
Organic Gardening
Outdoor Decor
Plants
Rose Gardening
Saunas
Solar Lighting
Vegetable Gardening
Wind Chimes

Home Maintenance
Carpet Cleaning
Heating
Pest Control
Power Tools
Solar Heating

Home Finances
Attorneys
Bankruptcy
Credit Repair
Debt Relief
Forclosures
Home Mortgage
Home Refinance

 






legal notices and disclaimers | privacy policy | site map

Copyright © 2007-2008 The Home 'n Garden Center ~ Getting Started: Five Organic Garden Tips for Beginners