Feb 2010 Product
The Secrets For a Lush Garden
This eBook contains following content
Gardening Tips: Borders
General Gardening Tips
Late Autumn Gardening Tips
Gardening Tips: Using The Internet
Gardening Tips: More Advice
What Kind Of Landscaping Equipment Do You Need To Have Around The House?
Find Yourself A Great Landscaping Picture
Why Use Landscaping Stones?
Get The Best Around The Pool Landscaping
Rain And Snow In Your Yard Landscaping
A Wonderful Backyard Landscaping Idea
Free Landscaping Software Helps Design Exterior On A Budget
Hillside Landscaping: Make That Hill Look Beautiful!
Landscaping Pictures Offer Different Possibilities
Low Maintenance Landscaping Chicago
The Key To Landscaping Design
What Does Your Landscaping Plan Need?
Not All Landscaping Software Is Created Equal
Do You Know How To Choose The Right Landscaping Supply Store?
Pool Landscaping Will Require Significant Thought
Gardening Tips: Growing Hot Peppers
Gardening Tips: Starting A Butterfly Garden
Gardening Tips: Compost
Gardening Tips: Organic Gardening
Gardening Tips: Patio Gardening
Gardening Tips: Winter Gardening
Gardening Tips: Creating A Wildlife Garden
Gardening Tips: Common Pests
Gardening Tips: Types Of Soil
Gardening Tips: Starting With A New Garden
Florist – Use Them For The Floral/Flower Gardening Idea
Indoor Gardening Supplies For Winter Fun
Cast Iron Furniture
Gardening Catalog
Gardening
Raised Summer Gardens
Landscaping Your Summer Garden
Oak Garden Furniture
Picking A Healthy Plant
Picking The Ideal Location For Your Garden
Summer Garden Weddings
Understanding Container Gardening
Gardening Tips: Borders
If you want to add ground cover such as creeping thyme or alyssum to your garden here is a great way to get started early and a fabulous way to create instant borders without the backache of having to plant each flower. Measure the area you want covered with ground cover. Let’s say you want to create a border along an existing garden that is 10 feet long. Cut newspaper (about 2 pages thick) into two feet long by one foot wide strips. To cover 10 feet you will need five of these two foot strips. Place the strips in a slightly sunny area but where the seeds won’t be disturbed or pelted with rays of light, such as basement shelving near a window. Place garbage bags on the shelves then add the newspaper strips. Do not overlap strips.
Sprinkle the seeds on the newspaper like you would if you were planting them in the ground. Place a layer of paper towel over each strip and then spray the towel, seeds and newspaper with a water bottle. You want to saturate the towel and the newspaper, but you don’t want it to drip. The paper must never dry out (if it does spray immediately.) Remove the paper towel when the seeds germinate (in about a week.) Two months later, weather permitting, you can plant your newspaper strips, now bursting with seedlings, outdoors. First carefully arrange each seedling strip where it will be planted. Once you are happy with the arrangement cover bare newspaper areas with soil to anchor the strip.
General Gardening Tips
Save all flats and flower pots that come with your plants. First, you can always use these to start your seeds next season (be sure to wash the flats to rid them of any disease.) Second, it may look funny at first, but if you cut out the bottom of plastic pots and place them over younger transplants it will protect them from rabbits. Additionally, placing pots around ornamental grasses is a great way to contain the younger, lower grass strands from rotting as they lay on the ground. The band created by the pot will keep the strands off the ground.
Here’s a coffee tip. Humans are not the only ones to get a boost from espresso. Plants do too! Caffeine and theophylline, two ingredients of coffee are popular ingredients in expensive skin care products, and key ingredients in asthma medications, but also make excellent fertilizer for plants. You can get it by the big bagful and for free just by contacting your local coffee shop. Just mix the espresso in with your existing soil every few months and watch your plants grow. Successful gardening means that you don’t always have to buy everything new, such as pots or fertilizer. Look around your home to see what you already have that you can reuse.
Late Autumn Gardening Tips
Come fall gardeners are usually a little teary-eyed over parting ways with garden tasks. For a little late season planting run to the nearest garden section and buy California poppy, candytuft, cornflower, dianthus, phlox, cosmos, soapwort, spinach, larkspur, pansies, some marigolds, snapdragons, garlic, and/or sweet pea seeds for what should be half off at that time of year. These hardy annuals can actually be planted in the fall and will bloom in the spring or summer!
Who doesn’t want instant blooming results in the garden? If you buy a plant you want it to be all it can be like, yesterday, right. Nurseries know this and so you will pay a premium for larger plants. Not only is there a demand, but also the overhead on a mature plant is more than a new one (larger container, more water, etc.) But if you are patient, buy the smaller plant. It will save you a good deal of money and in a couple of months, with the right conditions and some Miracle grow your plant formerly known as small, will be a force to be reckoned with.
Autumn is a great time of year to buy your seeds on sale as well as plant those late year garden varieties in your garden. Take the time to plan an autumn garden so you can enjoy flowers late into the year.
And much more...
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