Sunday, July 25, 2010

Gardening like a Professional with Modest Means

Gardening like a professional with modest means.

You might think it's a real challenge. But it's not. The modest means should be available for free, right around your house.

You don't really have to be a professional gardener to grow quality, vibrant, healthy and full of life vegetables. You need a desire to learn, to experiment, and apply in practice what you've learned.

It is so wonderful to work and relax outdoors, in the tranquility of your little paradise that you will create in the process of making your garden.

This is one of the most rewarding exercise you can get, and very much to enjoy at the same time.

Mother nature is so rich, and so freely giving, that we could never exhaust her of the never ending resources she has. The only thing we need to learn is how to receive and take from her, as long as we do not try to destroy her.

And we need to give some of it back, by composting the leftovers, and help the soil get fertile again, through natural means.

Sometimes the plot we intend to grow our vegetables in, is depleted of the best nutrients it used to offer. The first impulse would be to apply some chemically based fertilizer, but that's obviously not the best solution.

The land is so over fertilized and treated with dangerous pesticides in the lands where the produce is grown, the produce that we purchase from the supermarket shelf, is hardly safe to eat anymore. You don't know what kind and how much fertilizer and pesticides and fungicides was used to increase their bottom line for their productivity!

So what are we going to do? We have to eat fruits and vegetables, we've got to feed our families. Than what? Thanks be to God that created the Mother Nature, for there is an alternative to it: start your own Garden and grow your own fruits and vegetables, if you don't have one already. That's the smart thing to do. That's the safest way to eat fresh fruits, berries and vegetables. Especially today, when most of our produce is coming from imports, and we don't have a clue how were they grown!

We don't need to poison our bodies with chemical fertilizers and pesticides, that we don't even have any idea how much was there applied. We don't know how was the produce handled.

In my humble opinion, the best way to make the soil fertile is through natural means. Let's think of the forest, where the trees have grown and survived for hundreds of years. They even survived fires, and revived again stronger then before. Why?

Because of it's ability to replenish the nutrients by its natural means, without the intervention of the humans. The trees are dropping the dead limbs, and the leaves that decompose, and turns back into the soil, with the help of rain, wind, sun, heat, and our little invisible friends, the micro organisms that feed on them, and thus turn the decaying leaves into humus. That's exactly what the plants need to continue the cycle of life. Humus.

And that's exactly what we should do for the soil in our own garden. Collect the leaves from one year to another, have a pile in a corner of the garden, and let it decay. Just turn it now and then with a pitch fork, and you'll have the best natural fertilizer possible. For Free!

A lot of people are burning the leaves. Well, if they don't have a garden it's OK, I guess. But if they do have a garden, and they burn the leaves, and then they go to the supply store to buy that expensive chemical fertilizer, in my opinion that is a mistake. But, hey, who knows, maybe they have money to burn!

As for you folks, who are passionate about gardening and save the leaves, that's like money in your pocket, as well as prime quality fruits and vegetables, much safer to eat, than a lot of other people who maybe do not care.

If you have also access to some cow manure, or chicken droppings,that's perfect. But the leaves are the cheapest and smart way to make your own compost.

Now there are a lot of ways to make your own compost, of course, food leftovers, sea grass, seaweeds, ground oyster shells, peanut hulls, grass clippings, etc, etc, etc. I don't doubt that. But what I'm saying is that the leaves are the cheapest and the most readily available for almost anyone. And they cost you nothing! They are free.

Spread your compost on top of the soil, till it in the ground and reap the benefits of an abundant crop of fresh, vibrant, healthy, and happy fruits and vegetables from your own garden.

Create your own paradise and live smart, healthy, and well.

Until next time,

Happy Gardening!

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