How to Start an Organic Garden - Only 4 Simple Yet Important Steps

That’s what many people asked. If you are one of them. Here’s an advice; think simple and not complicated. This article will show you the 4 simple Steps to starting your beautiful organic garden. Basically on “How To Start An Organic Garden”.

Step #1: Planning Your Organic Garden

Planning Your Organic Garden is the most important step to start an organic garden and many people simply overlooked this one. If you don’t plan well, you will end up doing a lot of unnecessary stuffs. Always plan ahead.

August 10, 2008 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

Worms and Composting

Worms can help your soil and improve your garden.

Worm farms are excellent for small areas like balconies and courtyards because they are compact and relatively tidy. Worm castings (excrement) and juice (liquid runoff) make an excellent organic soil conditioner and fertilizer for the garden and potted plants. Worm farms are amazing little things. Essentially you put your food scraps into a container with worms, they chomp away on it and give you a by product of pH balanced castings (like a top grade potting mix, but probably better) and pH balanced liquid fertilizer.

Worm castings are coated allowing the nutrients to time release to your plants. Unlike chemical fertilizers, you can not burn your plants by using too many castings. Casts do not have to be diluted for use in the garden, but make sure they are tilled into the soil. For best results, add compost and mulch as soil cover.

August 5, 2008 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

Worms and Composting

Worms can help your soil and improve your garden.

Worm farms are excellent for small areas like balconies and courtyards because they are compact and relatively tidy. Worm castings (excrement) and juice (liquid runoff) make an excellent organic soil conditioner and fertilizer for the garden and potted plants. Worm farms are amazing little things. Essentially you put your food scraps into a container with worms, they chomp away on it and give you a by product of pH balanced castings (like a top grade potting mix, but probably better) and pH balanced liquid fertilizer.

Worm castings are coated allowing the nutrients to time release to your plants. Unlike chemical fertilizers, you can not burn your plants by using too many castings. Casts do not have to be diluted for use in the garden, but make sure they are tilled into the soil. For best results, add compost and mulch as soil cover.

August 4, 2008 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

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