Home Vegetable Gardening – Growing Radishes

May 15th, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

There are over 200 varieties of radishes, although most home vegetable gardeners grow the Crimson giant, champion or the cherry belle. These three varieties look like the small round red radishes most people are accustomed to.

Whichever variety you choose to grow, the steps to ensure a great radish harvest are virtually the same. Here is how you can grow great radishes in your home vegetable garden.

Radishes are one of those vegetables that are fairly easy to grow. In fact it is not necessary to even start them indoors. Regardless of whether you are growing them in a traditional backyard garden or in pots/containers or raised beds, growing radishes from the seed started outdoors is the best way to go. They can be grown in early spring, after the last frost, or in the autumn before frost sets in and they can germinate in as little as four days in optimal conditions. Do not plant the radish seeds any deeper than 1/2″.

Radishes like to grow in a soil where the pH level is neutral or as near neutral as possible. You can test your soil’s pH level by using a home soil testing kit available from any home or garden center for less than a few bucks. Try to get your soil’s pH level above 6.0 and near 7.0 without going over. Most kits come with recommendations as to how to make the adjustments you are looking for.

Keep the soil moist. Radishes need a moist cool environment to grow in and if you let the soil dry out, it won’t be long before your radishes stop growing. A moderate watering is all they will need. Remember you are trying to keep the soil moist not saturated.

Space your radish seeds out two inches to give them room to grow and plant them in an area that receives full sun, although some varieties will tolerate light shade. When the radish tops are about two to four inches above the ground they are ready to be harvested. You do not want to leave radishes in the ground for too long as they could develop a sharp or bitter taste to them.

To improve the flavor of your radishes plant them between lettuce. They also make for good companions to beans, beets, carrots, parsnips, peas and spinach and bad companion to fennel.

As you can see growing radishes are not all too difficult. Just make sure you plant them when the weather is cool outside, keep the soil moist and harvest them when they are ready to ensure great flavor.

About the Author
Mike is the author of the book Vegetable Gardening for the Average Person: A Guide to Vegetable Gardening for the Rest of Us, available where gardening books are sold. Sign up for Mike’s vegetable gardening newsletter at his website: AveragePersonGardening.com and he will send you a free pack of vegetable seeds to get your garden started.

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The Problem With Traditional Vegetable Gardening?

May 7th, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

Traditional vegetable gardens require an enormous amount of hard work and attention – weeding, feeding and strict planting schedules. There is also the problem of seasonality, allowing beds to rest during the cooler months producing nothing at all. Then we are told to plant green manure crops, add inorganic fertilizers and chemicals to adjust imbalanced soils. It takes a lot of time, dedication and a year-round commitment to grow your own food the traditional way.

But does it really need to be that difficult?

Let me ask you this question. Does a forest need to think how to grow? Does its soil need to be turned every season? Does someone come along every so often and plant seeds or take pH tests? Does it get weeded or sprayed with toxic chemicals?

Of course not!

Traditional vegetable gardening techniques are focused on problems. Have you noticed that gardening books are full of ways to fix problems? I was a traditional gardener for many years and I found that the solution to most problems simply caused a new set of problems. In other words, the problem with problems is that problems create more problems.

Let’s take a look at a common traditional gardening practice and I will show you how a single problem can escalate into a whole host of problems.

Imagine a traditional vegetable garden, planted with rows of various vegetables. There are fairly large bare patches between the vegetables. To a traditional gardener, a bare patch is just a bare patch. But to an ecologist, a bare patch is an empty niche space. An empty niche space is simply an invitation for new life forms to take up residency. Nature does not tolerate empty niche spaces and the most successful niche space fillers are weeds. That’s what a weed is in ecological terms – a niche space filler. Weeds are very good colonizing plants. If they weren’t, they wouldn’t be called weeds.

Now back to our story. Weeds will grow in the empty niche spaces. Quite often there are too many weeds to pick out individually, so the traditional gardener uses a hoe to turn them into the soil. I have read in many gardening books, even organic gardening books, that your hoe is your best friend. So the message we are getting is that using a hoe is the solution to a problem.

However, I would like to show you how using a hoe actually creates a new set of problems. Firstly, turning soil excites weed seeds, creating a new explosion of weeds. And secondly, turning soil upsets the soil ecology. The top layer of soil is generally dry and structureless. By turning it, you are placing deeper structured soil on the surface and putting the structureless soil underneath. Over time, the band of structureless soil widens. Structureless soil has far less moisture holding capacity, so the garden now needs more water to keep the plants alive.

In addition to this problem, structureless soil cannot pass its nutrients onto the plants as effectively. The garden now also needs the addition of fertilisers. Many fertilisers kill the soil biology which is very important in building soil structure and plant nutrient availability. The soil will eventually turn into a dead substance that doesn’t have the correct balance of nutrients to grow fully developed foods. The foods will actually lack vitamins and minerals. This problem has already occurred in modern-day agriculture. Dr Tim Lobstein, Director of the Food Commission said. “… today’s agriculture does not allow the soil to enrich itself, but depends on chemical fertilisers that don’t replace the wide variety of nutrients plants and humans need.” Over the past 60 years commercially grown foods have experienced a significant reduction in nutrient and mineral content.

Can you see how we started with the problem of weeds, but ended up with the new problems of lower water-holding capacity and infertile soils. And eventually, we have the potentially serious problem of growing food with low nutrient content. Traditional gardening techniques only ever strive to fix the symptom and not the cause.

However, there is a solution! We must use a technique that combines pest ecology, plant ecology, soil ecology and crop management into a method that addresses the causes of these problems. This technique must be efficient enough to be economically viable. It also needs to be able to produce enough food, per given area, to compete against traditional techniques.

I have been testing an ecologically-based method of growing food for several years. This method uses zero tillage, zero chemicals, has minimal weeds and requires a fraction of the physical attention (when compared to traditional vegetable gardening). It also produces several times more, per given area, and provides food every single day of the year.

My ecologically-based garden mimics nature in such a way that the garden looks and acts like a natural ecosystem. Succession layering of plants (just as we see in natural ecosystems) offers natural pest management. It also naturally eliminates the need for crop rotation, resting beds or green manure crops. Soil management is addressed in a natural way, and the result is that the soil’s structure and fertility get richer and richer, year after year. Another benefit of this method is automatic regeneration through self-seeding. This occurs naturally as dormant seeds germinate; filling empty niche spaces with desirable plants, and not weeds.

Unfortunately, the biggest challenge this method faces is convincing traditional gardeners of its benefits. Like many industries, the gardening industry gets stuck in doing things a certain way. The ecologically-based method requires such little human intervention that, in my opinion, many people will get frustrated with the lack of needing to control what’s happening. Naturally people love to take control of their lives, but with this method you are allowing nature to take the reins. It’s a test of faith in very simple natural laws. However, in my experience these natural laws are 100% reliable.

Another reason that traditional gardeners may not like this method is that it takes away all the mysticism of being an expert. You see, this method is so simple that any person, anywhere in the world, under any conditions, can do it. And for a veteran gardener it can actually be quite threatening when an embarrassingly simple solution comes along.

I have no doubt that this is the way we will be growing food in the future. It’s just commonsense. Why wouldn’t we use a method that produces many times more food with a fraction of the effort? I know it will take a little while to convince people that growing food is actually very instinctual and straightforward, but with persistence and proper explanation, people will embrace this method.

Why? Because sanity always prevails…

…eventually!

By Jonathan White, environmental scientist.

You’ll Make Thousands from Your Backyard by Producing Your Own Healthy Fresh Food… and It’s Easier Than You Imagine.

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Home Vegetable Gardening – Growing Garden Cress

April 30th, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

Herb gardening has swept the country. According the National Gardening Association over fifteen million people grow herbs.

An easy fast growing herb to add to your repertoire is garden cress. It is a peppery tangy flavored herb that is easy to add to anyone’s home garden.

Here are some steps that you can follow to ensure the success of the garden cress that you grow at home.

A lot of herbs are grown by themselves in a “herb garden”. But it doesn’t have to be this way. Garden Cress makes a great companion plant to bush beans, beets, carrots, lettuce and spinach to name a few. So keep that in mind when planting. The seeds of garden cress are small, so when you plant them a light covering of dirt is all they will need. Garden Cress seeds will germinate in as soon as 2 days and as far out as 6, so as you can see they grow quickly.

Garden cress likes the soil’s neutral pH to be as close to neutral (7.0) as possible. Test your soil with a home testing kit, available from any garden or home center for just a couple of dollars. Follow the instructions that come with the kit to raise or lower your soil’s pH level as needed.

It likes full sun so pick a spot that receives the most sunlight and if you have an indoor herb garden, make sure you pick a window sill that receives sunlight first thing in the morning. As for watering, garden cress does not need much. Just keep the soil moist with moderate watering and you will be ok.

Your plants are ready to be harvested when they reach two to three inches in height. Simply cut them at the soil line with garden scissors. If you follow the steps above you should have no problem harvesting your garden cress in as little as two weeks. Do not let them grow to long as they could develop a bitter taste.

As you can see you should be able to add this wonderful tasting herb to your garden in no time and with very little effort.

About the Author
Mike is the author of the book Vegetable Gardening for the Average Person: A Guide to Vegetable Gardening for the Rest of Us, available where gardening books are sold. Sign up for Mike’s vegetable gardening newsletter at his website: AveragePersonGardening.com and he will send you a free pack of vegetable seeds to get your garden started.

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Home Vegetable Gardening – Growing Endive

April 23rd, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

Endive makes for a great vegetable to be planted in the early spring soon after the last frost occurs in your area. It is a great addition to a salad or garnishes for many other dishes. Here is how you can add great tasting endive to your home vegetable garden.

To make life easier for yourself and take advantage of gardening as soon as the frost season passes you by for the warmer spring months, start your endive seeds in doors. A portable small greenhouse, also known in some parts as a humidity dome, is available at your local home or garden center for less than five bucks. This will help speed up the germination process. If you do start your seeds in pots, make sure you give your endive eight weeks before moving them outdoors and do not plant the seed any deeper than 1/4″.

While your seeds are germinating indoors get the soil prepared outdoors. Make sure the pH level of the area of your soil where the endive is going sits in the 5.5 to 7.0 range. You can get a soil pH tester at your local home or garden center fairly cheaply. When you pick your spot for endive make sure that area receives full sun.

One of the easiest parts of growing endive is harvesting it. Endive can be harvested as soon as the size of the leaves become useable. In other words when you feel like cutting off a few leaves and adding them to your dinner. I recommend using a pair of garden scissors to cut the leaves off about 1/2″ above where the leaf meets the stem.

As you can see it is very easy to grow endive. Once you get the hang of growing endive then you can really start to play around with it by staggering plants from early spring to early summer and early autumn to early winter so you have a good constant supply of this great vegetable.

About the Author
Mike is the author of the book Vegetable Gardening for the Average Person: A Guide to Vegetable Gardening for the Rest of Us, available where gardening books are sold. Sign up for Mike’s vegetable gardening newsletter at his website: AveragePersonGardening.com and he will send you a free pack of vegetable seeds to get your garden started.

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Garden and Nature Books of Sharon Lovejoy

April 14th, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »


Partial collection of nature and gardening book of author and illustrator Sharon Lovejoy

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Home Vegetable Gardening – Growing Mustard

April 13th, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

No not the yellow stuff you put on hot dogs at your backyard barbecue, I am talking about the green plant that adds some spice to your salads and other dishes. If you like spice with your food then add some mustard to the garden. You will be surprised as to how easy it is to grow. Here is how you can grow this cool weather plant right in your own backyard home vegetable garden.

It is easier to grow mustard if you start your seeds indoors. Start your seeds about two to three weeks prior to the last frost. It is best to use a portable greenhouse or humidity dome as that will speed up germination to less than six days.

Your mustard will grow best if the pH level of your soil is between 5.5 and 7.0. You can easily obtain the pH level of your soil by using a soil testing kit available from any home or garden center for less than a few bucks.

When you move your mustard plants outside, make sure they are in a spot that receives full sun throughout the day and especially sun first thing in the morning. Moderate watering is all mustard will need in order to grow and thrive. Do not over water as that could cause decay in the root system, or even worse, mildew to build up on the leaves.

When the leaves of the plants are about three to four inches they are ready to be harvested. When they reach this size you can clip off individual leaves and let the plant grow. If you let them go to six to eight inches then you can harvest the entire plant. The choice is yours, one of the beauties of home vegetable gardening.

Good companion plants include: bush beans, carrots, celery, cucumber, onions, and potatoes, where as you should avoid following cabbage in a rotation. Pole beans and strawberries make terrible companion plants.

As you can see mustard is not all too difficult to grow. Just make sure you plant your mustard when the temperatures are cooler outside. Early to mid spring and early to late autumn should do.

About the Author
Mike is the author of the book Vegetable Gardening for the Average Person: A Guide to Vegetable Gardening for the Rest of Us, available where gardening books are sold. Sign up for Mike’s vegetable gardening newsletter at his website: AveragePersonGardening.com and he will send you a free pack of vegetable seeds to get your garden started.

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Home Vegetable Gardening – Growing Swiss Chard

April 5th, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

Swiss chard is a wonderful addition to any home vegetable garden. With the many varieties there are to grow, you can literally add a wide range of colors and flavors to salads and many other recipes. Here is how you can properly grow Swiss chard in your home vegetable garden.

I like to start it indoors about two weeks prior to last frost of the season. This gives my seeds ample time to germinate. If you plan on starting your seeds outdoors wait at least a week after the final frost of the season. Bury your seeds no deeper than a half inch, with the soil being no cooler than fifty degrees Fahrenheit and no warmer than eighty-five degrees Fahrenheit.

Swiss chard likes the soil pH level to be as near neutral as possible. Keep your soil around a pH reading of 7.0 or as close as you can get without going over 7.0. To take a reading of your soil’s pH level you can simply visit your local home or garden center and pick up a basic soil testing kit for just a couple of bucks.

Regardless of whether you started the seeds indoors or outdoors, space your it out at least eight inches to give them and their roots plenty of room to grow. Your watering of Swiss chard should be moderate and even and they grow best in full sun.

You have a couple of options when they are ready to be harvested. When the leaves get to be eight to ten inches you can simply cut the leaves off and eat them or you can cut the plant off at the stem about an inch above the soil level. The second option will allow the plant to continue to grow giving you more harvests throughout the season.

Swiss chard makes a good companion plant for cabbage, legumes and lettuce and bad companions for Swiss chard are beets and spinach. Also avoid following the bad companion plants in a plant rotation cycle.

As you can see growing Swiss chard is fairly easy. Just make sure you follow the steps above and you will be well on your way to a wonderful Swiss chard crop.

About the Author
Mike is the author of the book Vegetable Gardening for the Average Person: A Guide to Vegetable Gardening for the Rest of Us, available where gardening books are sold. Sign up for Mike`s vegetable gardening newsletter at his website: AveragePersonGardening.com and he will send you a free pack of vegetable seeds to get your garden started.

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GREAT PREPPING BOOK ON GARDENING

March 31st, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »


MY REVIEW OF THE NEW SELF SUFFICIENT GARDENER. THIS BOOK COVERS ALL THE BASICS AS WELL AS ADVANCED GARDENING TECHNIQUES. BEST OF ALL IT IS A PREPPERS GARDENING BOOK.

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Pros and Cons of Indoor Vegetable Gardening

March 29th, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

There are two basic forms of vegetable gardening, and they are indoor vegetable gardening and outdoor vegetable gardening. Each form of gardening has its own pros and cons, and has its own share of difficulties that can be overcome once the gardener strives to put enough effort. It involves factors such as deciding on using the right kind of soil and learning how much water needs to be given in order to grow your produces in the best possible way.

Once you’ve actually experienced it, you will realize that indoor vegetable gardening is not as difficult as it seems, especially when it comes to preparing and maintaining the soil compared to outdoor gardening. The soil loses its nutrients by planting vegetables outdoors repeatedly. Another problem with outdoor gardening is that it requires using more fertilizers and risk of diseases.

On the other hand, indoor gardening does not require much use of fertilizers. Though maintaining proper levels of fertilizers is a tedious problem that needs to be dealt with adequately. When it comes to gardening indoors, you must also learn how to properly balance drainage of water with retaining suitable levels of water.

A common problem you’ll face in indoor vegetable cultivation is that indoor soil does not control itself as well as outdoor soil. There are also many potential dangers involved, especially if you make the mistake of overwatering.

There is no simple way of automatically watering your indoor vegetable garden, and in some cases the mess and the cost actually makes automatic watering very impractical. Another thing to be concerned about as far as indoor vegetable gardening is concerned, is giving the vegetables enough light. This won’t be a concern for outdoor vegetable gardening because the site of where you have chosen for your outdoor vegetable cultivation will get a lot of natural sunlight.

As for lightning and indoor vegetable gardening, you might find it necessary to shift your plants all through the day to ensure that your vegetables get light wherever sunlight is entering into the home at different times of the day. One advantage to this is that if and when there is too much sunlight, you can always pull the shades and protect your plants from the danger of excessive heat.

Another plus about cultivating your vegetables indoor is that if you place your produces near a window, you will give the plants the advantage of a greenhouse effect without ever incurring the expenses for an actual greenhouse.

For those who are worried about getting the most out of their indoor vegetable gardening, or any other form of gardening for that matter, it would certainly pay to check out some of the better vegetable gardening books out there, especially those that would reveal some helpful tips and secrets on how to improve your own garden. Once you’ve grasped and understood how to make the most out of your gardening, it is then up to you to choose between indoor vegetable gardening and outdoor vegetable gardening. That decision lies for you to make and it should depend on the amount of space that you have available for your garden, as well as your time and effort you’re willing to put into it.

Sylvia has been writing articles professionally, both online and offline, since 4 years ago. This author is not only writing in the subject of health, but also in dieting, fat loss, fitness and many other more. Check out her latest website in http://www.dvdwallstorage.com/ which discuss and review about DVD Wall Storage

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Money Secrets Of The Amish by Lorilee Craker, Personal Finance Book Review – Buying Bulk and Foodies

March 21st, 2012 -- Posted in gardening books, vegetable gardening | No Comments »

Challenging economic times inspire people universally to make wise financial decisions while still enjoying life. One culture that has always lived an austere, yet meaningful existence is the Amish. Increasingly, people are inspired by their lifestyle; and seek ways to simplify their own lives.

Lorilee Craker is the author of the new book, “Money Secrets of the Amish-Finding True Abundance in Simplicity, Sharing and Saving.” She examines their practices, extravagant in peace, family and community closeness. For them, thrift is a muscle that is exercised regularly.

Craker interviewed Amish folk in Indiana, Michigan and Pennsylvania, including an Amish banker whose clientele is 95 percent Amish. During the Great Recession in 2008, his bank had its best year ever. Amish experts and Englishers’ (Amish reference to anyone non-Amish), financial perspectives accentuate the book too. Here, two money-saving habits of the Amish are highlighted: buying in bulk and being authentic foodies.

Amish Foodies (aka Feinschmeckers). Feinschmeckers are Amish foodies-people who eat well and plenty. The Amish love to stick to cheap ingredients, easily accessible in their gardens, root cellars or barns.

Gardening. Gardening is frugal and the epitome of wholesomeness. It’s cheaper to buy seeds than it is to purchase vegetables. Gardening can be fun, allowing for time in the sunshine. Its biggest challenge is its time-consuming nature.

Canning. Canning is once again hip in these tough economic times (The inaugural National Can-It-Forward Day was celebrated Saturday, August 13, 2011).

Farm To Table. Buy directly from the farmer and you’ll save considerably. Beef and milk from grass-fed livestock, and eggs from land-grazing chickens taste better than their mass-produced counterparts. They’re also rich in Omega-3 fatty acids and vitamins A and E. Meat is less fatty than confined cows that eat soybean and corn instead of grass. Farm-to-table businesses promote a slower, kinder, gentler type of food consumption with a shortened food chain.

Community Supported Agriculture. A farmer offers a certain number of “shares” to the public. The shares typically consist of a box (or basket) of vegetables, but may include other farm products too. As a consumer, you purchase a share (aka a “membership” or “subscription”). Each week in return, you receive a box of seasonal produce.

Farmers Markets. Farmers markets are commonplace today. They unite country folk who produce healthy foods in an earth-friendly way and townspeople who pay a little more. When patronizing your local farmers market, keep these tips in mind:

  • Learn what’s produced regionally and ask growers about future market offerings. Buy in season.
  • Arrive early and reap the market’s best selections.
  • Arrive later in the day and benefit from lowered prices, in exchange for farmers not lugging their wares back home.
  • Be adventurous-buy ethnic, heirloom or rare vegetables. Google recipes.
  • Pre-plan meals and purchase accordingly at the market.
  • Bring durable canvas bags or backpacks for transport and small change to expedite transactions.

Buying In Bulk. The Amish buy in bulk monthly at dry good stores or damaged goods outlets (damaged or expired dated products are still perfectly good). They also frequent wholesale clubs, as not having a car demands planning ahead.

A big incentive for the Amish to purchase in quantity is their bulk-sized families. You may have a small brood to buy for. If so, decide whether the $40 or $50 annual wholesale club membership fee is worth paying. You might find it’s cheaper to continue shopping at your neighborhood grocer instead.

Craker notes your bulk savings will depend on the item, as some are better buys than others. Bad bulk purchases can include:

  • Brown rice. Its short shelf life affects its oil content.
  • Liquid soap. Left unused, it can turn into clotted jelly.
  • Paper towels and toilet paper. What’s cost cheap can weigh you down in other ways like storage, if it’s an issue.
  • Good bulk purchases can include:
  • Canned soup
  • Cereal
  • Diapers
  • Dog/Cat food
  • Tuna

Unit Price. Base your purchase on the unit price-the small number listed on the shelf sticker right below the item, which is more indicative of its value. This applies at wholesale clubs and grocery stores.

Breaking bread with family and friends transcends culture and cuisine. To authenticate, economize and enhance your mealtimes, consider adopting some practices of the Amish. This includes buying in bulk when it’s economically feasible, and eliminating the middleman and purchasing directly from the farmer.

For more information about Slow Food USA, a global, grassroots movement that links the pleasure of food with a commitment to community and the environment, visit http://www.slowfoodusa.org.

Timothy Zaun is a blogger, speaker and freelance writer. Visit him online at http://timzaun.com.

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