Home
Garden Stores News
Gardening Zone Links
Terms of Service
Privacy Policy
Contact

Sitemap

Sponsored Links

 

Navigation

Bushel baskets
National gardening association
Tomato gardening
Landscaping ideas
Gardening for kids
Kids gardening
Building a greenhouse
Garden landscaping
Florida gardening
Gardening sites
Gardening advice
Flower gardening
Garden furniture
Mens gardening clogs
Lasagne gardening

Books

Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/tea/public_html/gardens-gardening.com/includes/amazon.php on line 868


Organic Gardening is the Best Way to Grow

Many people do organic gardening as a relaxing hobby. It gives a sense of well being when they achieve a colorful show of flowers and plants. Some people go further than that, and grow their own food. The organic movement has grown in popularity in recent years, and organic food is easy to obtain at the local supermarkets, but gardeners want to do it for themselves. Organic gardening is very satisfying. In addition to organically produced flowers, you can produce fruit, vegetables and herbs that are full of flavor and you know exactly what\'s gone into their creation. There is literally no finer food on earth.

 

Organic gardening means no pesticides, herbicides, chemical fertilizers or artificial supplements. Every gardener has done battle with garden pests, but there are natural ways of removing them. After all, it\'s what previous generations had to do and they didn\'t starve. You just need a bit of cunning. One trick to get rid of those annoying aphids is to plant marigolds near to your vegetable patch. Let nature do its thing, and organic gardening will be less costly and give you peace of mind. A lot of people are worried, especially parents, about the chemicals that are routinely used in our food production. Sometimes these chemicals get into the waterways. Organic gardening means your kids and the family dog or cat, can play in the garden safely in a chemical free zone.

Organic gardening will involve the mysterious world of compost making. This is much more interesting than grabbing a bag of chemical fertilizer. It\'s not such a dark art really, you just need to know what to use and the more variety there is, then all the better. Basically, it\'s a great way of using up garden and kitchen waste material. You can use your own potato and other vegetable peelings. Rose prunings will help with the texture and coffee grounds will improve the smell! Make sure all the ingredients are dry.

There are other tips for organic gardening. For the constant fight against weeds and to keep the soil healthy, you can make your own mulch by making a mixture of pine needles and grass clippings. You can also spray pests with a concoction of cooking oil, dishwasher soap and water.

Organic gardening, even if you only have a tiny patch of land, enables you to have a natural relationship with the cycle of nature and the production of food. Somewhere on the way, we all lost that, and we got used to jumping in the car to go to the soulless supermarket to buy bland food. Most of us never stop to think where it comes from and if there\'s a better way. You can involve the kids in organic gardening too, encouraging them to take an interest in how food is made. They will have fun helping with the compost making and thinking up ingenious ideas on how to remove bugs. Most of all, they\'ll enjoy eating the delicious food that comes from organic gardening.



 

Gardening Recommended Products


Organic Gardening News

Organic garden center opens

A new locally owned and operated business is up and running in Toledo. The Organic Garden Center, located on Monroe Street in West Toledo, focuses on indoor and outdoor gardening with an emphasis on organic principles and techniques.

Read more...


Cornell educator will speak about organic gardening

NIAGARA FALLS—John Farfaglia, a horticulturist and educator for Cornell Cooperative Extension Service, will give a 30-minute presentation on organic gardening beginning at 12:25 p. m. Wednesday in Common Council Chambers in City Hall, 745 Main St.

Read more...


Organic Growers School rolls out its fourth annual True Nature Country Fair this month

Where can you learn how to train goats and stage a natural, do-it-yourself burial under one roof? The Organic Growers School presents its fourth annual True Nature Country Fair this month. There, attendees can learn about a wide array of funky and useful topics at nearly 50 workshops covering facets of sustainable living from raising cows to Ayurvedic healing. There will be a silent auction of ...

Read more...


Newtown Elementary celebrates its first organic harvest (VIDEO)

So, how far can you spit a watermelon seed? If your name is Andrew Wildgust, the answer is more than 11 feet.

Read more...


Oasis of inspiration in Tacoma's North End

A vegetable garden is growing in the North End of Tacoma that’s inspiring neighbors, passers-by and the community to begin gardening on their own. Call it viral gardening. Terry and Michele Drochak have turned their corner lot into a terraced vegetable oasis that doesn’t sacrifice aesthetics despite its almost industrial-paced output of produce.

Read more...