Vegetable Gardening For Beginners – 6 Easy Tips To Start You Off

Healthy vegetable gardens do more than provide a beautiful area in your yard. They repay your labor with nutritious food and a healthy varied diet. Vegetable gardeners are in tune with the environment, giving back to the soil what they take from it. Abundant vegetable gardens start with healthy, rich soil. Compost and mulch contribute to that natural wealth.

About 11,000 years ago, the first farmers began to select and cultivate desired food plants in the southwest Asian Fertile Crescent – between the ancient Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. Although we believe there was some use of wild cereals before that time, the earliest crops were barley, bitter vetch, chick peas, flax, lentils, peas, emmer, and wheat. About 9,000 years ago, Egyptians began to grow wheat and barley. About the same time, farmers in the Far East began to grow rice, soy, mung, azuki, and taro.

Then, about 7,000 years ago, ancient Sumarians established the first organized agricultural practices that made large-scale farming possible. Of particular note, they established irrigation as a way to nurture crops where none were possible before. Vegetable gardeners today use many of the same techniques established in early history. But today’s vegetable gardeners have millennia of experience behind them. Trial and error today is success or failure at the margins. Failure is not disaster.

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Inspirational Ideas For Your Garden

If like me you are recovering from Christmas with the outlaws, the credit crunch, and the fact that your kids reports are all underwater (below c level) what could be more therapeutic than planning things for next year in the coming year.

If you’re a real couch potato just looking out of the window can give you that inspiration for next season. Start with your garden structure. Is it lush, berried and scrummy, or can you see the neighbours washing line? No bare fences please, we want to see variegated hollies, Sarcococca and Hellebores complementing the climbing winter clematis Almandii for foliage and flower. That irritating neighbours window can be hidden with an evergreen tree such Quercus ilex (evergreen oak) or softened with the Himalayan Birch Betula jacqmontii.

If you are lucky enough to have a house full of kids, think out of the box about what they want to keep them interested outside. A swing or a slide would be the predictable easy option, while a living woven willow structure becomes Gollom’s cave, a crater on the moon and somewhere to get away from Mum and Dad. Try Salix vitellina easily woven into a den, crocodile or animal of your choice.

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Green House Gardening

There are three different ways of gardening. One is to have your garden inside your house. The other is to use whatever space your garden has and plant your crop outside. The third way is to do your gardening under glass. This is called greenhouse gardening.

Greenhouse gardening is not that different from your average outside gardening. The main consideration that you need to think about is controlling the temperature of your greenhouse. Remembering that plants thrive at temperatures that are slightly lower than what is in our houses and that they require a much higher humidity than we are used to, will let you see that your greenhouse plants get the proper environment.

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