Archive for the 'How to' Category



Home Gardening Basics

Tuesday 13 July 2010 @ 2:35 pm

Vegetable gardening for beginnerscan amount to be mounds of fun. If you don’t know what to do or where to start don’t worry hopefully you will learn today. Look for tips that will help along the way.

Gardening For Beginnersseriously isn’t a daunting task whatsoever provided you already know which crops you are looking at growing and place you would like to grow them. If you’re able to find a space about 320 square feet that should be more than enough. Start with something smaller and you can even plant a garden in small beds or containers. Beets, carrots, lettuce, radishes, squash, tomatoes, cucumbers, beans are good options for gardening for beginners. Before beginning make sure to research the things you intend to grow.

It’s a great idea to only grow vegetable that you would actually eat. You will find alot of gardening tips for beginners that will help along the way. Vegetables like sun. Around six hours of sunlight each and every day is really a must to enable them to grow. Your vegetables will grow best in well drained and loamy dirt. The local nursery may help you with soil testing and help you find the correct type of soil.

Placement matters a good deal. Remember this cause vegetables need alot of nutrition. Other plants or trees growing to close to your garden can take in the vital nutrients that your garden needs. Remember the watering needs of your garden. Ensure that your garden get an inch of water every 7 days.

One thing to keep in mind is to not over fertilize. Lots of fertilizers can burn the tender roots or leaves. Composting can also be really essential for plant health. If the nutrients are around for the plants as compost then you need not fertilize. Make sure that your plants have the space required to grow. For newbies, it is often suggested they must grow three to six tomato plants. Lettuce and spinach dont need much space to grow. The same thing is applicable for radishes.

Mulching is one thing to be considered.. Mulch will significantly help in lowering soil temperature. The soil will also retain moisture better. This is good cause the root of the plant needs a lot of water.




Learn How To Build A Good Foundation For Your Garden Shed

Saturday 10 July 2010 @ 6:57 pm

Winter will be over rather soon even though it may not seem real right now. When spring and summer come, gardening season will be at its peak. Most home owners will think about their gardens and about how to make them even more convenient and attractive. Spring and summer are seasons when most garden buildings, that is garden sheds, are sold. This article will deal with a serious problem not all garden owners are aware about. It is something you really need to know before buying your garden shed. We are going to speak about building a garden shed base. No matter what type of a garden shed you are going to erect in your garden, a firm and a level base is a must have. If you do not want to pay extra money to someone who will construct the base for you, you will have to do this work by yourself. This article will try to help you to build a good foundation for your garden shed.

First of all, you need to make sure that your base is constructed from a durable and reliable material. This is the only way to ensure that your garden shed will be easy to erect and that it will last for many and many years. If you decide to erect a garden shed without any basement, then you will not be able to get any product guarantee in the majority of cases. Aside from that you might face problems like doors do not want to close and water leakage.

It is important to choose the right location for your garden shed. Do not locate it close to various walls and fences. Otherwise you will not be able to make an overhanging roof. It is not recommended to place your shed near overhanging branches and large bushes. It is better to cut such branches away; otherwise they may damage your shed’s roof. And a damaged roof will not be able to protect your stuff from the elements. Make also sure you are able to access the walls of your shed from the outside. This is required to allow regular wood maintaining procedures.

Sometimes the best thing to do is to hire a reputable builder to construct a shed base for you. But if you feel experienced and skilled enough, you could perform this task on your own.
The basement of your garden shed should be a bit larger than the shed itself. It is recommended to make it about 1.5 inches larger on each side. There are three major types of basements. You could construct a concrete, a paving slab or a timber foundation for your garden shed. All of them have certain advantages and disadvantages, so make sure you do some research before starting your project.

The is one thing that that you might need for gardening is a good gardening shed. For the list of wooden garden sheds, please visit this web site that is majoring at wooden garden sheds. You will find all sorts of sheds here: Victorian, quaker, workshop sends and surely the wooden garden sheds.

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Where in Your Place Can You Grow Roses

Tuesday 22 December 2009 @ 6:22 pm

First consider what kind of rose-garden you will plan. Roses seem to enjoy being arranged in countless ways. Will the first show of bloom to burst into view, as one approaches your home, be on your pergola, or arbor, or rose-covered summer-house? If none of these furnishes appropriate setting, probably your banks or fences will be clothed or beautified. A variety of types is available, and choosing from these will become a delight.

Perhaps your fancy may picture prosperous beds, abounding in a wealth of bloom, to be seen across a sweep of level lawn, or from your favorite room in the house, or even hidden beyond the curve in your garden-walk.

The formal rose-garden, too, is important, especially on the larger place. There are excellent reasons why the rose-garden should have a domain all its own. These fastidious creatures that so well repay your thoughtful care may well be grouped and with greater resulting effectiveness. In no other case, perhaps, does careful planning pay so well as in the formal garden.

In these brief suggestions of rose-garden possibilities let us recall vividly the value of the rose in the landscape. Here again a knowledge of varieties is important. Landscape architects are recognizing more and more the noteworthy species which are valuable in mass-plantings for showy effects, for retaining embankments, for bordering driveways, or even for certain types of hedges.

Or you may wish most for a garden of roses from which to cut bouquets, so that “the glory of the garden” may be reflected in your home. Good taste will suggest the right roses-one for this vase, a bunch for that bowl, a spray for the guest-room, still others for the hallway or the dining-room table, then surely some for boutonnieres, and at times for “state occasions.” Surely anyone who has experienced the exquisite thrill welling up in the soul from the presence of choice roses well arranged will be eager to develop the skill needed to make the best use of nature’s garden-gifts.

Several available spaces for the rose-bed are usually to be found on the average home-grounds. I’ve had the good fortune to visit a number of rose-gardens that are famous-and others that deserve to be-and this may be said of nearly all: that they lie on the genial, sunny side of a generous group of trees or copse, but are open to the gentler breezes, and are not shut in or shaded.

Choose a place, therefore, or establish one, protected either by trees, a hedge, a wall, a building, or by some other wind-break. Even a hedge of roses, or climbers, upon a substantial trellis will avail, although a denser screen is more effective. Choose, too, a place where the sun will shine for not less than one-half of the day, preferably the morning. By this you will see that a space opening away to the south or southeast is to be preferred. We have noted equally successful rose-gardens entirely surrounded by hedges.

A landscape architect must have talent for both the aesthetic and the functional.




Secrets to Rose Planting

Sunday 6 December 2009 @ 8:26 am

Planting a rose plant goes beyond how deep the hole should be and if plant food should be applied now or later. The first and most fundamental measure in rose planting that should not be overlooked is picking the location of where you are going to plant your roses. It is as true in planting as it is in real estate; location, location, location. There are some matters that need to be studied when choosing a location for our rose plants.

Will the space you care preferring to establish your roses get decent sunshine? The majority of rose species should get at least 6 hours of direct, unfiltered sunshine a day. Yet rose plants that are shade tolerant call for about four to six hours of direct sunlight to do best.

Is the ground where you project to plant your roses healthy? Roses are hungry eaters and demand to have nutritious soil. They do not like soil that has too much clay or too much sand. A quick test you can do with your soil to find out if it has too much clay or sand is to clump it in your hand. If the soil holds the mold and does not fall apart easily, it has too much clay. If the soil crumbles too easily and does not hold the mold, it has too much sand. Good soil should maintain the mold in your hand but crumble easily. The soil should also not be too acidic, contain too much limestone or too much chalk.

And finally, is the site where you are going to plant your rose plant too close to trees or other plants? There are many trees and other bigger plants that will extract water and nutrients from the soil from roots that extend far beyond their drip line. If you see a lot of roots where you are digging your hole for your rose bush, most likely these roots are going to make a problem for your plant. There are some climbing rose and some shrubs that are an exclusion but most rose plants only like to be mixed with other roses or other non-invasive plants.

Now that you have the perfect location for your rose plant, you can consider the basics such as how deep the hole should be. You will need to dig a hole that is slightly larger than the size of the pot the plant is in or root system of the plant. The depth of the hole depends on the climate that you live in. Colder regions need to plant their roses somewhat deeper. It is a good idea to talk to other rose growers in the area as to which is the right depth for you. Depths may be different for lots of different people but, everyone can benefit from loosening the soil at the bottom of the hole.

You can also set some compost in the bottom of the hole plus a scatter of bone meal which is a source of Phosphorus and is slow working and advances healthy root development. Spread out the roots slightly after you place the plant into the hole. Fill Again the hole and make sure that the soil settles around the roots. Water the roots before you cover them with the last couple of inches of soil. And finally place the last of the soil back into the hole and firm the soil slightly. You can water the plant at this step also.

Kor Rassad offers more great tips on Rose Planting, at his website http://www.growtheroses.com.




Caring for Roses – A Beginners Guide

Saturday 5 December 2009 @ 3:26 pm

Roses are many of the most pleasant and beloved flower that decorates our gardens and our lives. Unfortunately roses have a reputation for being a difficult plant to care for. While some rose plant owners see this to be right, others learn steps to find out the particular care that is required for their roses.

Roses do need regular care to maintain the plant looking its greatest but, after learning the right steps to take in caring for roses, assisting a plant to look its healthiest is easy. The most basic necessity that most individuals understand that plants need is water. All plants need water and roses are no different. Roses will blossom and look their best if it is well watered. Roses need to be supplied with about one inch of water per week.

It is the roots of the plant that really need to be considered during this step. Roses have roots that go deep into the ground. Because roses have deep roots they are capable of extracting water from the sub-land even when the surface is dry. This serves them to stand dry spells. Watering the roots of the roses furthers them to grow deep into the ground. Sometimes when a plant owner only offers their roses frequent, lighter watering, the roots of the plant will grow to be shallow within the ground. This results in the plant not being capable to handle the drying of the upper layer of land due to droughts.

Correct rose care also means fertilizing. Most species of roses are capable of living years without fertilizing when they are established in good ground. Plants feed on nutrients that are created by organisms existing in the ground. By over using man-made fertilizer you can clutter those positive bugs. Plus, your plants can become addicted on fertilizers forcing you to constantly supply them. Alternatively, owners can utilize a slow-release plant food to the ground just as the plant is arriving out of its dormancy period in early spring.

You can also give a small bit of plant food after the flowers go away and the plant is storing up energy for next season. But don’t fertilize after midsummer. Roses do well with both artificial and organic plant foods although organic fertilizer materials can be digested by the helpful bacteria and fungus inside the soil resulting in your soil permanently getting more fertile. The most working combination of artificial fertilizer is 5-10-5 or 4-8-4.

Pruning is highly essential in the care of roses. It is commonly done in the spring, after the plant has been dormant for the winter. At this stage pruning is done to get rid of the dead, broken, or diseased wood from the plant. This serves to provide the plant with space for the air can move through it as well as keeping it healthy. Pruning is also done to shape the rose plant. The next stage of pruning takes place after the plant has bloomed. Pruning the actual flowers themselves promotes growth and by removing the flower buds it helps to establish a new plant.

Caring for roses does call for time and commitment. It also takes patience, skill, and knowledge. But, there is nothing better then to be able to display your hard work for all to see. The rewards of being able to show off these gorgeous creations right on your front lawn are priceless.

Enjoyed reading this article? For more great information on Caring for Roses, visit http://www.growtheroses.com.

categories: caring for roses,rose gardening,roses,species of roses,plants,flowers




Control And Beautify

Friday 13 March 2009 @ 10:11 pm

Beauty by Control

Several years ago when I seriously started seeking outstanding beauty and vigor in roses I soon learned that failure was caused by the basic elements which had to be controlled, the most difficult being feeding and watering.

At first, exact control of these elements seemed impossible. All sorts of approaches were tried with indifferent success until a plan was found that seemed to work perfectly every time, almost like magic. It made such a difference in my rose growing that I decided to manufacture my device and offer it to rose growers everywhere.

This device is simply called a “Water-Well” and the system of cultivation is a special adaptation of a type of mulch culture. With this I have been able to control feeding and watering so exactly that vigor and beauty of my garden roses as well as the overall appearance of my garden landscape are outstanding. The savings in formerly wasted nutrients and water is simply tremendous. Here are some of the advantages:

1. Better, more efficient, easier watering. 2. Concentrates and supplies water only where needed. 3. Prevents waste water. 4. More thorough (deep) penetration of water. 5. Water can be measured easily, even from a hose. 6. Deep watering develops deeper and more vigorous root growth. 7. Simplifies fertilizing. 8. Prevents waste of fertilizer. 9. Eliminates cultivating. 10. Prevents “legginess” in plants by promoting growth nearer ground. 11. Allows grass to grow non-competitively among the flowers. 12. Grass never interferes with feeding and watering. 13. Size can be set to fit the particular specimen plant. 14. Once installed it never needs attention since it lasts for years.

There are many other advantages which will be readily apparent once you see the system in operation. Since the WATER-WELL is flush and virtually out of sight, no fresh earth ever shows, and you may walk among your flowers after a rain or right after or while watering and feeding with no mud hazard. With this system your garden never has that fresh cultivated look and you, the back-breaking labor that goes with it and yet is always under perfect control.The vigor and beauty in foliage and blossoms and the ease of caring for your roses will astound you.

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How To Preserve Flowers

Friday 13 March 2009 @ 8:58 am

To preserve flowers they should be dipped in melted paraffin which should be just hot enough to maintain the fluidity. The flowers should be dipped one at a time, held by the stalks and moved about for an instant to get rid of air bubbles. Fresh cut flowers, free from moisture, are said to make excellent specimens when treated in this way.

There are other methods listed for preserving flowers as well. I have been giving preserving roses with wax some thought and while never having tried wax on rose blooms (not artificial blooms), I question being able to apply a finish. My experience finishing cloth, lightweight print cloth as well as heavy duck causes me to make this statement.

The heat necessary to melt the wax plus the vehicle (solvent) would be harmful to the petals. Application and even distribution of the compound by dipping. or brushing would present a problem as tension, roller coating would be harmful. Perhaps a starch or other clear film would be the base product you are looking for instead of wax?

Here again solvents would enter into the picture except for starch which could have a water vehicle, as well as another base product which I am thinking about which has been used for sizing other than glue.

This may be looked at as negative regarding the above because but there might be someone who has formulated a wax application and in the meantime Ill give it some more thought.

Enclosed some catalogs find a method for preserving rose blooms by waxing. Dont know if it is successful for flower seeds as we have yet to try the process. Cut rose buds that show a little color, allowing as much stem as possible. Dip a part of the lower stem in hot wax and cool. Wrap entire stem and bud securely in waxed paper. Be sure the wrapping is airtight.

Then store in a dark, cool place (not below 35 Fahrenheit). As much as six months later if you want flowers, remove paper, cut wax dipped end off and place stems in tepid water.

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