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Home Vegetable Gardening
![]() Home Vegetable Gardening is the best ebook to help you get started. If you have always wanted to grow your own delicious, mouthwatering organic vegetables, herbs, fruits and berries now you can do it with a little planning and care and with the excellent advice you will find inside this book! After you have tasted how delicious homegrown vegetables are, you will never settle for ordinary store-bought produce again! For some, the home vegetable garden is a hobby and for others a great money-saving helper, especially in these days of high prices - whether or not your experiences in gardening have been restricted and your time limited. This book is written especially to give you practical home vegetable gardening insights that you can do quickly and easily. We have also considered the Envionment with our Gardening methods. Home Vegetable Gardening will guide you every step of the way with detailed instructions for everything from garden planning and preparing to planting, protecting, and harvesting. Can you see the value of knowing both how to set up a successful home vegetable (and fruit) garden PLUS be able to keep it protected and providing for you and your family over the coming years? Tips for Growing an Organic Vegetable Garden -more tips inside this fabulous ebook. Enjoy healthy, tasty, organic vegetables fresh from your garden. These tips will help make you successful. Starting Out Right For the healthiest plants, make sure you have good growing conditions. Choose Plants Sensibly Some plants, such as tomatoes, are naturally more susceptible to pest and disease problems than others. Feed Your Plants Naturally In most soils, fertilizing your vegetables isn’t necessary, but it will help them grow faster and give better crops. Practice Rotation If you plant the same vegetables in the same spot every year, disease can build up and be ready before your plants have much of a chance. Keep the element of surprise against your disease foes and try to plant your crops in different parts of the garden each year. Mulch Well A layer of mulch over the soil not only helps reduce weeds, but it creates a barrier that can prevent fungal disease spores from splashing up onto plant leaves. Declare War on Weeds Weeds not only compete with your plants for water and nutrients, but they may also attract insect pests. And many insects spread disease as they feed from one plant to the next. Keep the Garden Clean Many diseases spread rapidly in dead, fallen foliage. Regularly — once a week or more if you have time — walk through your garden and pick up shed foliage. Also: You can sometimes prevent a disease from spreading through an entire plant just by picking off an infected leaf. Throw dead or diseased leaves in the trash bin, not in your compost pile. Water Wisely Wet leaves, especially in the afternoon or evening hours, can attract disease. Avoid watering your plants with a sprinkler. Instead, use a water-saving soaker hose to deliver water directly to the roots. Give Them Some Air While jamming plants in is a great way to get the most from your plot, it can also cause problems. Avoid planting your vegetables too close together. Good air flow between the plants can help prevent many types of fungal diseases. Plant Some Flowers A few flowers will not only help your garden look prettier, but they may also attract beneficial bugs. These good guys in the garden attack insect pests such as aphids and tomato hornworms. Don’t worry about these good bugs: Most types are small enough that you’ll hardly notice them in the garden. Be Realistic One of the hardest lessons for first-time organic vegetable growers is that organic gardens don’t look perfect. They’ve achieved a balance where there’s usually some form of damage from pests and diseases. Nature comes to the rescue before that spotted leaf becomes a plague. http://www.creativevisionebooks.com/wellness/home-vegetable-gardening/ |
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