July 16th, 2011 Gardening Tips for New Gardeners
Growing your own garden is something that every person reading this article can learn to do. If you heed the right advice you can grow your own fantastic and thriving garden-even if you don’t have a whole lot of space for growing plants available to you. Even people with small patios or no yard space at all. Some people are able to grow whole gardens indoors! If you want to learn about how to grow, keep and nurture your own garden, keep reading. You are bound to find the gardening tips that you’ve been hoping to find.
Start slowly. If this is your first garden start with just one plant or a few of the same type of plant and a small garden plot. This will help you gain practical experience in things like soil tending and plant care. Don’t try to take on a large or complicated garden until you have successfully grown and raised your first plant. Many newbie gardeners take on way too much way too soon and then later they are disappointed when they can’t seem to grow a vast array of plant life. To really learn the art of gardening start small and work your way up-don’t skip steps.
Before you plant your seedlings or cuttings draw a map of the garden you want to grow. Mark out both on paper and on the ground where you want each type of plant to grow. This will help you quite a lot if you want to grow more than one type of plant at a time. Caring for individual plants will be made a lot easier while they are still growing if you have a map. Plants tend to look alike to beginner gardeners. Drawing a map will help you track which plants are sprouting when they start to grow. It will also help you plan future gardens once the blooming and growing season has passed.
Composting is a fabulous way to make your garden healthier. Compost can be made at home without having to make any special purchases.
Building your own small compost pile is easy. It can be made from all sorts of stuff that you already have in your house: food scraps (plant based of course), tea bags, old egg shells, dead flowers, old flower cuttings, clippings from when you mow the lawn and even bedding from pet cages can be used in a compost pile. Pretty much the only thing you can’t put into a compost pile is meat. You have now grown your own fertilizer to use in your very own garden! Growing a garden doesn’t have to be difficult or intimidating. In fact, the more diligent you are about the care and keeping of your chosen plants, the more likely it is that you will grow a thriving garden! Just remember that patience is a virtue. It takes a lot of time to grow a healthy garden. Anybody can be a good gardener. You don’t need to have a “green thumb” or any sort of special gardening insights in the beginning. You only need to find good hints to follow and you can grow anything you want!
Lastly, visit this website for more gardening tips
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July 28th, 2011 at 3:50 pm
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July 28th, 2011 at 5:44 pm
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August 16th, 2011 at 3:31 pm
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