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What You Need To Know About Organic Vegetable Gardening Supplies

July 12th, 2008
by Ray Lam

Organic gardening is a skill that most people should learn. In these dire times, pesticides and chemicals have poisons the very ground that crops are grown in, learning to grow your own food at home is probably one of the wisest decisions that anyone could make. However, before making the leap into the organic gardening arena, there are a few supplies that you need to get before you can begin to grow your own food.

You can find organic gardening supplies at the hardware store, home center, or your local farm supplier. Seeds from organic sources are available for only a little more than it would cost you to buy conventional ones, but without the risk of pesticide and other chemical contamination. You can also pick up untreated topsoil, compost, and manure. Avoid treated and fertilized soils, which contain chemicals you won’t want in contact with your plants. One big bonus of these organic gardening supplies is that they’re often cheaper than buying chemically treated options. That saves your wallet as well as your health.

Other supplies that can be helpful will depend on how you’re planning to set up your garden. People who are looking for organic gardening supplies for an outdoor project will need different things than people setting up an indoor or windowsill garden. Container gardeners should buy pots with the eventual size of the plants in mind. If your plant is going to become large, it will need a large, heavy pot. Consider setting this pot on a wheeled platform early on if you’ll need to move your plants into the sun on a daily basis.

Organic gardening supplies can be purchased at virtually any store. The supplies you will need as far as tools are basically the same as those needed by conventional gardeners. What you will need that is different are the composting additions that are typically bypassed by ordinary gardeners that will use pesticides and chemicals to protect their crops from on coming pests.

Keep birds away from your seeds and crops with loud, reflective items, such as aluminum pie plates flapping in the wind. Make your greens taste bad to rodents by spraying them with a dilute solution of garlic, soap, or cayenne pepper. Just remember to wash them well before eating them yourself, or you’ll get a surprise!

About the Author:

Ray Lam Gardening

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