Organic Gardening – for Fun and Profit

Growing your own vegetables, salads and herbs can be great fun. Using organic gardening methods makes this satisfying and nutritious.

It’s not difficult and it’s not expensive to start. In fact you can use recycled goods to get you going. You can also add the odd companion plant such as sunflowers which attract beneficial insects, as well as looking great, of course.

Here are a few ideas to whet your appetite.

Why grow organically?

It’s really easy. It’s environmentally friendly.. and it’s really quite good fun! It’s also great exercise. Organic gardening is green gardening because it is truly sustainable.

How to begin

Any scrap of land can be used as long as it has soil and you can clear a space. Don’t use land which might be contaminated with industrial pollutants.

You can also do amazing things with a few containers or tubs. Some vegetables can grow quite well in the confined space of a planter or a window box. Lots of the common culinary herbs such as chives, mint, thyme and basil do quite well in containers or planters.

Companion plants such as marigolds and sunflowers are very easy to grow, too. They will help to attract beneficial insects such as hoverflies and bees.

To clear your patch, get a garden fork and give the soil a dig. Loosen up and remove all the weeds. This is the hard work part. Alternatively, you could just scrape the weeds away and sow your seeds without disturbing the soil. Many organic gardeners swear by this method. A hoe or a spade is good for this.

Whether you are new to this kind of exercise or not, warm up your muscles first with a brisk walk or other exercise. You can quite easily strain your back when digging, especially if you are not used to it, so it pays to limber up first.

Put your weeds somewhere out of the way to compost. They will provide good soil nutrition in months to come. You can use them to form banks and wind breaks in your garden – very environmentally friendly!

Give the ground a raking before you sow your seeds, if possible.

Let the ground settle for a few days and buy some seeds. Good things to try to start are salad crops such as lettuce, mizuna, radishes and spring onions. Read the packs before you buy as sowing and growing times vary quite a lot.

Follow the instructions on the packet and you are away. Most seeds are fairly undemanding, provided that the soil is warm enough. Around 7 degrees Celsius and up, if you want to check.

Don’t worry about manure or other sources of fertility to begin with. Most soil will be rich enough to grow crops in the first year without any additional nutrients.

If you have a little success with sowing and growing simple vegetables and herbs you will be providing yourself with delicious and nutritious food. Your vegetables should be chock full of vitamins and minerals and far tastier than most of the fare on offer in your local supermarket. You can ensure that they are really fresh by picking them just when you want them. Organic gardening means there are no toxic pesticides to worry about.

And your veg will have traveled precisely zero food miles!

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