Hello Tom Here,
The practice of tlc gardening work efforts will create an ideal plant environment, resulting in better yields with less labor. Whether natural gardening is your hobby or your livelihood, organic gardening is essential across the generations. Also for grandparents, this is; way to enjoy gardening with your grandchildren and at the same time showing them tlc’s beauty.
Gardening is not only about digging in the dirt. It’s more about preserving and fully understanding the different types of plants, the care, and all the other factors needed in order to strive such as cultivation, the amount of water, and sunlight.
Let’s look at two purposes of cultivation, to stimulate growth and get rid of weeds, (1) by cultivating it lets air into the soil and opens up other wise unavailable plant food, and (2) by conserving moisture. As to weeds, the gardener of any experience doesn’t need be told the importance of keeping his garden rows clean. He or she has learned from experience the price of letting them get out of hand. He/she knows that one or two days’ growth, after they are well up, followed perhaps by a day or so of rain, may easily double the work of cleaning a patch of onions or carrots, and that where weeds have attained any size they are to hard get out of sowed crops without doing plant harm. He/she also realizes, or should, that every day’s growth means just so much of the available plant food gets stolen from under the very roots of his legitimate crops.
Instead of letting the weeds get away with any plant food, he should be furnishing more, for clean and frequent cultivation will not only break the soil up mechanically, but let in air, moisture and heat all essential in effecting those chemical changes necessary to convert non- available into available plant food. Long before the science in the case was discovered, the soil cultivators had learned by observation the necessity of keeping the soil nicely loosened about their growing crops. Even the lanky and untutored aborigine saw to it that his squaw not only put a bad fish under the hill of maize but plied her shell hoe over it. Plants need to breathe. Their roots need air. You might as well expect to find the rosy glow of happiness on the wan cheeks of a cotton-mill child slave as to expect to see the luxuriant dark green of healthy plant life in a suffocated garden.
Important as the question of air is, that of water ranks beside it. You may not see at first what the matter of frequent cultivation has to do with water. Let us take a moment and look into it. Take a strip of blotting paper, dip one end in water, and watch the moisture run up hill, soak up through the blotter. The scientists have labeled that “capillary attraction” the water crawls up little invisible tubes formed by the texture of the blotter. Now take a similar piece, cut it across, hold the two cut edges firmly together, and try it again. The moisture refuses to cross the line: the connection has been severed.
In the same way the water stored in the soil after a rain begins at once to escape again into the atmosphere. That on the surface evaporates first, and that which has soaked in begins to soak in through the soil to the surface. It is leaving your garden, through the millions of soil tubes, just as surely as if you had a two-inch pipe and a gasoline engine, pumping it into the gutter night and day! Save your garden by stopping the waste. It is the easiest thing in the world to do cut the pipe in two. By frequent cultivation of the surface soil not more than one or two inches deep for most small vegetables the soil tubes are kept broken, and a mulch of dust is maintained. Try to get over every part of your garden, especially where it is not shaded, once in every ten to fourteen days. Does that seem like too much work? You can hoe or till through, and keep the dust mulch as a constant protection. If you wait for the weeds, you will nearly have to crawl through, doing more or less harm by disturbing your growing plants, losing all the nutrients (and the weeds will take the cream) which they have consumed, and actually putting in more hours of infinitely more disagreeable work. If the beginner at gardening has not been convinced by the facts given, there is only one thing left to convince him experience.
Having given so much space to the reason for constant care in this matter, the question of methods naturally follows. Get yourself a tiller. The simplest sorts will not only save you an alot of time and work, and does the work better, very much better than it can be done by hand. You can grow good vegetables, especially if your garden is a very small one, without one of these labor-savers, I assure you that you will never regret the small investment necessary to procure it. With a tiller, the work of preserving the soil mulch becomes very simple. If you don’t have a tiller, for small areas very rapid work can be done with the scuffle hoe.
The matter of keeping weeds cleaned out of the rows and between the plants in the rows is not so quickly accomplished. Where hand-work is necessary, do it all at once. Here are a few practical suggestions that will reduce this work to a minimum, (1) Get at this work while the ground is soft; as soon as the soil begins to dry out after a rain is the best time. Under such conditions the weeds will easily pull out by the roots, without breaking off. (2) Immediately before weeding, go over the rows with a small tiller, cutting shallow, but just as close as possible, leaving a narrow, plainly visible strip which will be hoed by hand. The best tool for up next to large plants is the hoe after running the tiller. (3) See to it that not only the weeds are pulled but that the soils surface is broken up. It’s important that the weeds just sprouting are destroyed, and the larger ones pulled up. One pass thruogh with the tiller will destroy a hundred weed seedlings in less time than one weed can be pulled out after it gets a good start. (4) Use one of the small hand-tillers until you become skilled with it. Not only may more work be done but your fingers will be saved unnecessary wear.
Your skills improve as time goes on. The first thing to learn is that it is necessary to watch the tillers tines, for the plants safety and the rest will take care of it selve.
My gardening advice is meant to give the gardener all the guidance needed to help make the garden perfect. Thanks for reading, I hope this article provided you with the knowledge and understanding you were looking for. Be sure you get your free container gardening report and browse through the categories and article links at the right and start finding the answers to your questions.