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Organic Gardening Made Easy: Your Complete Guide

Use these organic gardening tips to help your garden flourish without using toxic chemicals or processed fertilizers!


Organic gardening is a practice that requires the use of natural inputs and avoiding highly processed or chemical-based fertilizers, pesticides. An organic gardener might attempt to develop their soil by focusing on composting and rotating crops.


Organic gardening is popular among many people who want to have control over the foods they eat. According to organic guidelines, going green produces better quality and yields when it comes to planting a garden at home using basic principles from an organic standpoint.


Following some simple tips can help improve your crop's yield by leaps and bounds!




Natural Organic Gardening


Organic gardeners are focused on using the most natural methods available to grow their crops. This involves avoiding traditional chemical pesticides and fertilizers and finding sustainable, environmentally friendly alternatives.


Recycling kitchen waste into organic compost is one of the most common ways that they can create fertilizer for an organic garden.


Composting is a great way to reduce household waste and create nutrient-rich soil for your garden or yard.


Organic gardeners are just as focused on improving soil quality, which is the foundation for sustainable farming. If you only focus on increasing crop yield and do not improve the overall health of your soil, it will eventually become infertile; this reduces its ability to support fruits and vegetables.


Compost helps to increase the number of microorganisms in soil, which is beneficial for organic gardens. A greater number of insects and microbes means a healthier soil that supports life; therefore, compost will improve any garden.


There are many ways to ensure the soil quality in organic gardens without adding chemicals or new soil. Simply using better farming methods ensures that there is no need for pesticides, fertilizers, and other harmful substances.




How to Plant an Organic Garden


Spacing plants closer together than in a traditional garden or farm is common in organic gardens. There are a number of benefits that result from planting crops slightly closer together, in addition to the larger amount of plants that can be grown in the space.


Closer plants shield the soil from sunlight, which stops it from becoming dried out. The connected roots also retain more moisture, which reduces the amount of water needed. Additionally, close-grown plants crowd out weed plants, which reduces the necessity of removing them.


Rotating or mixing plant types also helps improve the soil. There are a number of nitrogen-fixing plants, such as peas, which are common in organic gardens because they increase the amount of nitrogen in the soil.


Permaculture is a type of organic gardening in which crop rows are discarded in favor of creating a garden based on purely natural principles, in which each plant serves a specific purpose.


Pesticides are discarded in favor of planting things that attract beneficial predators like insects and certain species of birds, as well as plants that repel harmful insects. Planting crops and decorative plants that attract beneficial insects as bees and butterflies can also help an organic garden become successful.


Saving seeds from good strains of certain crops is also common among organic gardeners. This allows gardeners to influence the quality of their crop through selection, as well as save a great deal of money on purchasing new seeds each year. Saving seeds is a simple way to improve an organic garden each year.




Biodiversity in Organic Gardens


Permaculture is a great way to increase biodiversity in organic gardens. Traditionally planted gardens can also help with this, as they provide habitats for local wildlife and reduce harmful plants and insects.


Biodiversity helps both the garden environment by reducing harmful creatures that eat crops, weeds which take nutrients from soil or damage plant life, etc., while providing homes for beneficial animals such as bees who pollinate flowers or birds who hunt pests in your yard like snails that would otherwise destroy vegetation.


By planting native fruits and vegetables, you can greatly increase the biodiversity of your garden. Native plants are naturally resistant to most local pests, diseases, and problems - meaning that they don't require as much weeding or disease management!


Additionally this will help restore populations of these species in areas where their numbers have dwindled due to invasive species.




By incorporating biodiversity, natural pesticides, permaculture techniques and traditional organic gardening methods into an organic garden the overall health of the plant life will be greater.





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