Monday, August 6, 2012

Having A Plan For Your New Garden To Ensure Success

Gardening is a very relaxing hobby with the added bonus that it isn't that expensive. The elderly and the very young can help create aromatic flowers, delicious vegetables or lush landscape. Children will be delighted watching seeds grow and flourish into beautiful flowers and tasty vegetables. Gardening can also help appreciate outdoor life and nature. This article is packed with tips you should use to improve your garden, perhaps with the help of the people you care about.

Choose trees that come to fruition in the fall. Fall is usually associated with foliage, but some trees will produce decorative fruit. Your berries will have a range of colors from deep reds to bright yellows, and will last well into winter, allowing your garden to remain colorful, and also providing food for birds. The best varieties include hawthorn, holly, crab apple and choke berry.

An easy, inexpensive way to give them nutrients is to pour the leftover water from your steamed vegetables into the soil. If you grow rhododendrons, azaleas or gardenias, increase the acid in your your soil by working in coffee or tea grounds. Some types of plant fungus problems can be solved by sprinkling with chamomile tea.

Always protect yourself from the sun when you are outdoors working in the garden; you can do this by wearing clothes that will shield you from the sun. Put on some sunglasses, sunscreen and a wide-brimmed hat. If you properly protect yourself from the sun, you will not get a sun burn and you will decrease your risk of getting skin cancer.

Cover fences and walls with lots of climbers. Plants that climb are extraordinarily versatile, and can help hide an unsightly wall or fence, usually within one season. They can be trained to grow over an arbor, or through trees and shrubs that are already in the garden. Some need to be tied to a support, whereas certain climbers attach themselves to a surface with tendrils or twining stems. Reliable varieties include wisteria, honeysuckle, climbing roses, clematis, and jasmine.

If you need to make compost, store old plants and organic elements in plastic garbage bags. A good time to collect compost is in fall after the leaves are raked from your yard. Place the leaves in bags and store them someplace warm. By spring, you'll have a larger, fresh compost pile.

To keep pests away, you can use plants in the garden or other natural materials. For example, if you plant onions or marigolds along the edges of your vegetable garden, you can ward off slugs. Wood ash can be used as mulch, and if put on the base of shrub and tree seedlings, will keep insects away. You can avoid using pesticides that contain harsh chemicals if you employ these techniques.

When you sow seeds in your garden, try not to rush the process. A key first step is to add moisture to your soil. Then distribute the seeds so that they are evenly spaced and have sufficient room to grow. Bury them at a depth that is three times that of the height of the seeds. Read the seed pack as some varieties shouldn't be covered with soil because they require light to sprout.

You can be friendly to the environment by using rainwater to water your plants. Collecting rainwater in buckets not only helps your garden be environmentally conscious, but it can also save money on utility bills. This will help you save your money and keep an all natural garden.

Plant a variety of flowers to keep your flower garden colorful and interesting. Annuals and biennials can add excitement and interest to your flower garden every season. You can use biennial and annual flowers to brighten the bed, and let you change how it looks. You can also use these flowers to fill gaps between shrubs or perennials. Attention-getting options exist such as sunflowers and petunias.

You should make sure to divide your irises. Overgrown clumps of irises can be divided up to increase your numbers of this lovely flower. If you find any dead irises in your garden, immediately pull up the bulbs. The bulbs should automatically divide in your palm, and once you put them back into the earth, they will typically flower the following year. Use a knife to carefully divide rhizomes. Cut out new pieces from outside the bulb and throw away the old center. Every piece needs to have a minimum of one good offshoot. For optimum viability, plant your new cuttings into the ground without delay.

An English garden mixes plants of various kinds and sizes close together, which helps to give it a more multi-dimensional feel. If you only use uniform plants, your bed will look boring and flat.

In conclusion, these gardening tips are easy to follow and simple to understand. You simply need to know some basic approaches and then you can carry those techniques into your garden. Pay close attention to your plants as you try each method to see how they respond. If one thing fails, give another a go. Your neighbors will envy your garden if you practice patience.

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