What Vegetable Garden Is Right
for You?
By Mary
Amos
Two Types of Vegetable Gardens
For those of us who love to nurture and consume vegetables,
home gardening is a great activity to take part in. Once you
have decided to have your own vegetable garden, the next step
is to decide what
type you want. There are
two types of gardens: land gardens and container gardens. When
one plants vegetables in the ground, it is called land
gardening. When one plants vegetables in pots, it is called
container gardening. Both have their advantages and
disadvantages. Find out which is right for you through this
simple guide to land and container vegetable gardening.
Land Vegetable Gardening
To plant a vegetable garden on solid ground, you must carefully
determine the size, location, and soil of your garden.
When you're planning a garden, it's important to decide the
size of garden you want. In order to easily maintain a garden,
you should start out small with a small garden and gradually
expand if you later on desire to. I recommend starting out with
a garden of 25 square feet or smaller. As you get the hang of
gardening, you can expand your garden to be as big as you
wish.
Before beginning a vegetable garden on solid ground, consider
the location of your garden. Plants need about six hours of
sunlight in order to fulfill their potential. Therefore, it is
inadvisable to place your garden where there is a lot of shade.
You should also make sure that you can locate your garden in a
place with sufficient drainage. To protect your vegetables from
drowning, make sure you can position your garden away from the
bottoms of hills and other places where water is likely to
collect.
Before planting in the ground, you should make sure that the
soil is compatible for gardening. Soil that's slightly loose
and simple to till is best. Stay away from hard,
difficult-packed soil. If your yard has mediocre soil, mulch or
compost will be a big help for your garden. In fact, composting
won't only greatly help your garden, it will also decrease the
amount of your trash.
If you have the desired size, location, and soil for a land
garden, you will enhance your chances for success in gardening
on solid ground for beginners.
Container Gardening
If, on the other hand, you have little space, little sunshine,
infertile soil, or impaired mobility, you may want to grow
vegetables in containers. Container gardening allows you to
position the plants in places where they can receive the best
growing conditions in your area. Container gardening also
creates better pest management and a chance to have color in
areas where you want color. The downside of container gardening
is that containers demand daily watering, which you must do by
hand.
Some plants are especially fit for container-gardening.
Vegetables that grow appropriately in containers are those that
are used to growing in confined spaces, such as salad greens,
spinach, eggplant, Swiss chard, beets, radish, carrots,
peppers, bush beans, tomatoes, bush varieties of summer squash
and cucumbers, green onions, and many herbs. Other plants will
also grow well in pots, even if they are not meant for
container gardening.
Regardless of the type or size of container used, adequate
drainage is a necessity for successful plants. It is wise to
add about 1 inch of coarse gravel in the bottom of the
container to control drainage. For most vegetable crops,
5-gallon containers are the most appropriate size.
Some Last Notes
Unfortunately, it is almost impossible to have a garden without
pests, and land gardens attract the most bugs. Unless you want
to use chemicals, you will have to kill any pests on the plants
yourself and with the help of pest-eating bugs. You can buy
these pest-eating bugs, such as ladybugs or praying mantis,
from garden stores to get rid of pests. For larger bugs like
grasshoppers and such, you will have to pick them off by
hand.
Another issue you may have while vegetable gardening is to make
sure the weeds do not take over your garden, especially if you
have a land garden. If you don't go out daily to pick the
weeds, the weeds will choke out the plants and take over.
Watering your garden is important not only to keep your plants
alive and healthy, but also to repel some of the bugs that
might otherwise eat your plants.
Your Final Decision
This is a rewarding experience, because you end up with a
delicious plant harvest. The question is whether you should
start a land garden or container garden. This question is
usually answered by one's own resources. If you have an area
outdoors that is sunny for at least six hours a day and yields
good soil, opt for the land garden. If you live in a city,
let's say, and do not have a parcel of land to garden on, then
create a container garden. Either way, don't miss out on the
cherishing moments of farming in and eating from a vegetable
garden. If you loved the ripe vegetables that grandma used to
grow, you should relive those precious memories by starting
your own land or container vegetable garden.
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