Archive for January, 2010

Lasagna Gardening AKA No-Dig Gardening

Lasagna, or no-dig, gardening is a revolutionary new way to get great-tasting, nutritious vegetables and gorgeous flowers out of your very own backyard, but without ANY back-breaking digging or weeding. It’s so easy, it feels like cheating!

Lasagna gardening got it’s name because it refers to the layering involved in creating this pressure-cooker of organic power. To start up your very own lasagna gardening bed, you can build on top of an established plot or start fresh right on top of untilled earth. Either way, you’re going to need a few supplies, which you might already have if you’re currently doing square foot gardening.

  • a wooden frame for containment
  • fertilizer
  • compost
  • newspapers/cardboard
  • hay/peat moss
  • mulch

and, of course, you’ll still need shovel or fork to pile it all up with.

Now, you’re ready to start layering.

Build or place your containment box wherever it should go. This will keep the ingredients from falling out of your bed and wandering away. It should be about 8-10″ high.

Begin your layers with a slab of cardboard or thick newspaper mat, totally covering up the inside of the box. This will form the base and prevent grass or weeds from growing up into your bed.

On top of this, pile about 4″ of water absorbent organic material like hay, peat moss, or whatever you can find. This will act like a sponge, soaking up extra water and encouraging your plants to grow down into it.

On top of the hay, spread about an inch of fertilizer, or compost if you have plenty. The nutrients here will give your plants exactly what they need to grow big and juicy.

Above that, pile lots of hay or straw, or whatever you’ve chosen for your absorbency layer, -about six or eight inches of it. We’re keeping the moist levels separated, so they can breathe as they break down into rich soil.

On top of that, more fertilizer and more compost, forming a five- or six-inch-deep level of nutrients. Now it’s ready to plant!

Put your seedlings into this rich bed, and then mulch around them to prevent weeds and keep in the moisture. You shouldn’t plant root crops in a new lasagna bed, but plants with shallower roots will be fine. And after it has “cooked” for a year, it will be ready for root veggies as well.

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Gardener's Supply Company

Get our Free Gardening Book: “Your Guide to a Successful and Beautiful Garden” at http://www.squarefootgardeningtips.com

Add comment January 29th, 2010

Organic Food Gardening How To

Organic Gardening How ToOnce you start growing foods in your own garden, you might be considered an organic gardener! But wait, not so fast. Are you really doing all you can to make sure your organic garden doesn’t get accidentally un-organic’d.

It’s not hard to make mistakes – maybe you used some treated wood when you built your container garden, or a pesticide that wasn’t organically based.  And, although you may never know it, if you accidentally ruin your organic garden this way, you might as well just be buying your foods at the local supermarket.

Growing an organic garden requires special talent, and is something that’s learned in the process.  It doesn’t always come naturally.  But you can save yourself a few years by reading up on the subject.  One book that we can highly recommend is My Organic Food Garden.  It’s written by Jeff Serland and, with his help, you’ll soon be growing the best tasting food you’ve ever eaten.  And that’s what it’s all about! 

So why should you concentrate on organic?  Here are just a few things organic gardening food can do for you:

  • Increase energy and metabolism
  • Increase sex drive (really!)
  • Lower or eliminate depression – not just eating it, but the satisfaction (and exercise) you get from growing your own food!
  • Increase motivation – just wait until you put all that beautiful food on the table – you’ll want much more!

Now’s the time to start learning, before you need to rush into planting.  So brush up on your skills on using fertilizers, killing weeds, planting seeds, and much more.  Get a head start on your organic garden today!

Organic Gardening

Get our Free Gardening Book: “Your Guide to a Successful and Beautiful Garden” at http://www.squarefootgardeningtips.com

Add comment January 10th, 2010


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