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Archive for February, 2010

Landscaping – Stone versus Mulch

25 Feb

Up until a few years ago, I remember going out to my flower bed every year after a long New York winter had passed to find that the flower bed almost always needed a complete over haul.  Meaning, that during the course of late Summer/Early Fall and the Winter, the look, texture, and resilience of the bed had fallen flat. Actually, more like, packed flat from all the snow and ice.

After rearranging or replacing dead plants and flower, the last thing we always had to do was go out and get more mulch for the bed.  I noticed year after year, that within a month, the mulch had faded, been blown away, or had weeds growing up through the black canvas underneath and through the mulch.  Or the weeds us the mulch as soil and grew in it.

We finally decided, that we were going to give stone a try.

Using stone, for us, has saved us a lot of time, money, and energy.

While stone is a little more expensive on the front end – depending on how much and how often you had to replenish your mulch, it should pay for itself within the first two or three years.  For us, if I remember correctly, the cost of mulch vs. using stone was not that much different.  Ordering it by the yard, ended up giving us a lot more than we needed, so we used the rest in areas that we had always planned on doing.

Advantages of Stones:

Only have to be placed once

Won’t blow away

Can be easily maintained, transferred

Multiple colors, shapes, and sizes

Advantages of Mulch:

Cheap

Biodegradable

Easy to transport

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Posted in Stones

 

Square Foot Garden Method

22 Feb

The “square foot gardening” was popularized by Mel Bartholomew in his 1981 Rodale Press book .

An updated book published by Mel Bartholomew in February 2006.

The practice combines concepts from other organic gardening methods, including a strong focus on compost, closely planted raised beds and biointensive attention to a small, clearly defined area. Proponents claim that the method is particularly well-suited for areas with poor soil, beginning gardeners or as adaptive recreation for those with disabilities.

The original square-foot-gardening method used an open-bottomed box to contain a finite amount of soil, which was divided with a grid into sections. To encourage variety of different crops over time, each square would be planted with a different kind of plant, the number of plants per square depending on an individual plant’s size.

A single tomato plant might take a full square, as might herbs such as oregano, basil or mint, while most strawberry plants could be planted four per square, with up to sixteen radishes per square. Tall or climbing plants such as maize or pole beans might be planted in a northern row (south in the southern hemisphere) so as not to shade other plants, and supported with lattice or netting.

The logic behind using smaller beds is that they are easily adapted, and the gardener can easily reach the entire area, without stepping on and compacting the soil. In the second edition, Bartholomew suggests using a “weed barrier” beneath the box, and filling it completely with “Mel’s mix,” a combination by volume of one third of decayed Sphagnum “peat moss”, one-third expanded vermiculite and one-third blended compost. For accessibility, raised boxes may have bottoms to sit like tables at a convenient height, with approximately 6″ (15cm) of manufactured soil per square foot.

Benefits:

  • Much less work. Conventional gardening requires heavy tools to loosen the soil, whereas in this method, the soil is never compacted and it remains loose and loamy. Weeding takes only seconds to minutes, due to the light soil, raised beds, and easily accessed plants. Harvests per foot of garden are increased due to the rich soil mixture, well-spaced plants, and lack of weeds produced when following Mel Bartholomew’s method.
  • Water Savings. The soil mixture that is advised has water-holding capacities, so that the garden needs water less frequently, and in much smaller quantities than when using other gardening methods. Water is also spared by hand-watering directly at the plant roots, so that there is very little waste and tender young plants and seedlings are preserved.
  • Very little weeding. One benefit of this close planting is that the vegetables form a living mulch, and shade out many weed seeds before they have a chance to germinate.
  • Pesticide / Herbicide Free. Natural insect repellent methods like companion planting (i.e. planting marigolds or other naturally pest-repelling plants) become very efficient in a close space and thus, pesticides are not necessary. The large variety of crops in a small space also prevents plant diseases from spreading easily.
  • Accessibility. A plywood bottom can be attached to the bottom of a box, which can then be placed on a tabletop or raised platform for those who wish to garden without bending or squatting, or to make gardening easy for wheelchair, cane or walker users.
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How To Start Seeds Indoors

22 Feb

Below are two fun videos to help you with planting seeds.

Vegetable Garden How to start your vegetable seeds / plants indoors to beat the weather and save money.

Vegetable Garden How to start your vegetable seeds / plants indoors to beat the weather and save money.

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First-Time Vegetable Garden – Consider This

18 Feb

If this is your first year gardening, you should probably look at plants that require little maintenance on your part.

Great choices would be the pepper and tomato plants. They thrive in vegetable gardens. Both require plenty of heat, which makes them a great choice for raised beds.

Beans also grow easily from seed. They love the sunlight and provide large crops throughout the summer, you’ll find yourself picking them over and over.

Now is a good time to plant lettuce and spinach, since they do best in cooler weather. You’ll want to harvest them in the spring months and then reseed later in the summer. Late August is a good time for a second harvest.

Wise 4 Living

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Gardening Tools

16 Feb

Depending on where you live, the time is just around the corner to start looking at the different tools you either have or need for this Springs gardening chores.

Whether you only need one thing or a multipack, there are deals out there for you to find. Usually this is the time of year to find them. Stores still holding last years inventory will have a lot of items marked down, but not for too much longer. Spring is only two months away, and those good deals will soon be gone.

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