Green | July 08, 2009 | 12 comments

How to Plant a Garden

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jdbranded
I've been trying to start a small garden in my backyard for months! I'll feel much better when I know that much of what I eat is coming from my own soil. What are the best fruits and vegetables to start with?
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    Green,   Sustainable Agriculture
  2. tags:
    Green Environment Sustainable Agriculture Gardening
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12 comments // How to Plant a Garden

  • hell0everything
  • SeaJade
    • 0
      SeaJade  
    • Mel Bartholomew's Square Foot Gardening works really well, I'm loving the results (with a few of my own changes to suit the environment i live in)....
      In this short video, the garden girl didn't know how to grow lettuce in summer... (shade plant)...
      both of these people will give you good tips... if you find you are having a really difficult time with your soil, consider mel's square foot garden...

    • 2 years ago
  • SeaJade
    • 0
      SeaJade  
    • It depends upon where you live, what condition your soil is in and what kind of soil you have, and what time of the year it is... how much shade and how much full sun do you have? Are you starting from seed or buying seedlings?

      These youtube bits will also give you some good ideas....

      The link above: The Kitchen Garden - with Geoff Lawton on Permaculture principles...
      Segment from Geoff Lawton's new DVD on Establishing a Food Forest the Permaculture Way.
      Available Sept. 2008 from www.permaculture.org.au

    • 2 years ago
  • pv788
    • 0
      pv788  
    • Growing is awesome, and it can be done in any space in some capacity. If you live in an apartment with any sort of small balcony that gets some sun, you can definitely plant out there. I planted a tomato and basil plant and left the pots out on my balcony, and they're growing! All you have to do is water them twice a week and pick off flowers starting to grow on the basil plant so it doesn't die. I recommend trying this, its great and you'll end up loving your plants.

    • 2 years ago
  • leahl
    • 0
      leahl  
    • pv788:

      Seriously. I haven't ever looked at food in the same way ever since I started growing it myself. You start to understand what a precious resource it is.

    • 2 years ago
  • leahl
  • jdbranded
  • leahl
  • nursediesel
    • 0
      nursediesel  
    • For good advise ask successful gardeners in your area, not only will they be happy to give you advise they'll be giving you advise specific for your zone.

      State Co-ops sites usually have example gardens, free classes and free over the phone advise from their master gardeners. Check local listings or call a near by community college or garden club they can hook you up with the co-op. Good luck!

      The taste of the first home grown fruit or vegetable is a real taste rush. They are so much better than store bought, you want to keep doing it every year. You and your friends and family will thank you.

    • 2 years ago
  • PressCore
    • 0
      PressCore  
    • Carrots, for one. Rhubarbs & strawberries are excellent too. If you obtain a Jack LaLane juicerator you can feed massive amounts of carrots into it and produce a juice that will help your digestion before meals and add another 20 years onto your life span. The fructose in carrots can't be easily tasted unless you eat carrots that are so ripe they're soft(and not so appealing). But if you juice fresh carrots that are nowhere near ripe you release all that fructose and carotene into its water soluable form which is easily assimilatable. It also helps you regulate your weight as you get older by regulating your blood sugar level. Carrot juice is the choice of body builders, and tastes even better when you juice a favorite fruit compatable with its texture and taste. If you've had rhubarb &
      strawberry pie, you're in for a treat. Makes a great desert with home made ice cream. Always compost your soil first with organic biomatter that tempers the PH of the soil it makes, compatable with the PH of the plants you grow in it. Eg.with growing strawberries,you need to compost biomatter rich in acidic minerals like iron, or add iron per se before the soil gets watered, and you plant. Good luck..

    • 2 years ago
  • brandonthebuck
  • JinSpiration
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