You will know, with organic vegetable gardening, that your vegetables will be free from pesticides, grown locally to you, just picked and most importantly will taste deliciously fresh.
The shop bought equivalent cannot match them for taste and freshness or even novelty shapes!
What is organic vegetable gardening?
Growing vegetables without the use of pesticides and artificial fertilizers. Building and maintaining good natural soil fertility, crop rotation, green manure crops, good natural varietal resistance, combined with companion planting , inter-cropping and barrier methods for pest and disease management.
When you think of organic gardening, you probably think of a pesticide-free garden that is fertilized with composted manure. One that is friendly to butterflies, birds and people. Yes, that is the organic way, but there is a lot more to growing an organic garden than simply staying away from pesticides. Organic gardening happens when you take into account all of nature, and most specifically, the entire plants system. To have a healthy garden you need healthy plants. That starts with water, soil, the site, fertilizing, insects (both good and bad) and people. Wildlife plays a part too, especially if they pose a threat to the health of your plants.
Most of us know you have to till the soil, plant the seeds /plants/ flowers, water the seedlings, provide nourishment and get rid of pests. Lets take it one step at a time and find out the basics to get started on our organic journey. I'm going to link you into some great resources that can tell you all about each important element of growing organically.
Ensure your vegetable garden soil is in best condition. Successful production depends on good vegetable garden soil structure;
But, first you must identify your garden soil problems and learn how to overcome them.
Well it comes down to a bit of exploration and detective work, and yes, getting your fingers dirty like most gardeners do!
So find a trusty spade and go down to your plot. Dig a hole the width and depth of your spade, cutting the 3 sides towards the sun with the spade, leaving the one facing the sun to be bust as you lever out the earth;
Perfect garden soil is characterised by;
Poor soil is characterised by;
Top soil depth
Check the depth of your top soil as this will govern both the depth of digging and choice of technique (no-dig, shallow dig, traditional dig and use of raised beds or flat beds).
Soil type
Check the soil type by examining a representative sample of soil taken from the top 5-7cm soil taken after scraping off the surface 3-5cm. The mix of sand, silt and clay determines the soil type and basal characteristics of soil.
Soil drainage
Whilst you have still got the hole, pour in some water using a watering can/ bucket and see whether it drains away. It should slowly drain away. If the water stays you need to explore the deeper sub-soil which is probably damaged by compaction and will need soil lifting or the use of raised beds.
Garden soil pH governs nutrient uptake and growth
Check soil pH by taking 3-4 representative samples from your plot, mix thoroughly and test the combined sample in a pH test kit from your local garden store.
Soil organic matter
Check soil organic matter content by comparing the colour of the soil where you are planning you vegetable garden with an area nearby which has been left undisturbed for 10+ years. The darker and more crumbly the soil the higher the organic matter content.
Improving your garden soil
Encourage your garden worms to multiply and work hard for you.
Vegetable garden soil is one of the most important factors to get right for success of your vegetable garden. The newly launched eBook 'The Secrets of good soil preparation' tells you all you need to know.
Tips for Making Better Compost
I hope you like the article and the information
If you want to read more about the organic compost you can read here https://www.gardenreviewer.com/how-to-make-the-best-organic-compost-for-vegetable-garden/
Thanks, Ben Martin