I want to grow and organic garden, does anyone have any tips? W?eather, sun light, soil..?
it would be the same as any other garden except you won't be using any chemicals.
Comments
Elliot Msays
Well, you can't do much about the weather. Choose a part of your garden with lots of sunlight. Grow things like Zucchini, that grow pretty easily on their own. Tomatoes are fine too (lots of work to deal with pests. Potatoes and carrots should work well too. I wouldn't go so much for fruits…keeping them pest-free will be hard. Peas and beans should also be relatively easy. It depends on your climate, of course! Good luck. References :
beebssays
It all depends on where you live. I live in North Carolina and keep an indoor hydroponic garden going year round. In season, I use two liter water bottles to grow inverted pimentos, peppers, cucumber, radish, herbs, etc. I grow potatoes in container gardens, such as old wheelbarrows, feeding troughs, etc. You can buy organic potting soil, and use homemade compost as fertilizer-just save your kitchen scraps in a barrel, trashcan (clean) or composting bin. I like doing inverted gardening as it keeps ground pests away, and there is no need to use pesticides. I hang the bottles from my deck, and the plants grow downwards effortlessly. Email me if you need more info. References :
auroraresearchinstitutesays
it would be the same as any other garden except you won't be using any chemicals. References :
Elliot M says
Well, you can't do much about the weather. Choose a part of your garden with lots of sunlight. Grow things like Zucchini, that grow pretty easily on their own. Tomatoes are fine too (lots of work to deal with pests. Potatoes and carrots should work well too. I wouldn't go so much for fruits…keeping them pest-free will be hard. Peas and beans should also be relatively easy. It depends on your climate, of course! Good luck.
References :
beebs says
It all depends on where you live. I live in North Carolina and keep an indoor hydroponic garden going year round. In season, I use two liter water bottles to grow inverted pimentos, peppers, cucumber, radish, herbs, etc. I grow potatoes in container gardens, such as old wheelbarrows, feeding troughs, etc. You can buy organic potting soil, and use homemade compost as fertilizer-just save your kitchen scraps in a barrel, trashcan (clean) or composting bin. I like doing inverted gardening as it keeps ground pests away, and there is no need to use pesticides. I hang the bottles from my deck, and the plants grow downwards effortlessly. Email me if you need more info.
References :
auroraresearchinstitute says
it would be the same as any other garden except you won't be using any chemicals.
References :