hortoris
Turkey
Ireland
gardening
potatoes
horticulture
hortoris
Turkey
Ireland
The website greengrove.cc is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.
Growing Organic Vegetables Best Tips - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 15:11

Growing Organic Vegetables Best Tips

Homegrown  vegetables are definitely worth the time and effort and organics are even better. Growing vegetables will reward you with a fresh and tasty supply of your favourite vegetables. You can also have the reassurance of knowing how they were grown without the unnecessary spraying of countless chemicals.

Tips for Growing Giant Vegetables - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 15:00

Tips for Growing Giant Vegetables

This is one of the many books in my collection but the only one to focus on growing big, bigger and biggest vegetables. If you want to grow giant vegetable for exhibition or to get large crops then there are many pointers in ‘How to Grow Giant Vegetables’ by Bernard Lavery and below.

Welcome to Gardeners Tips Blog - gardenerstips.co.uk
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:58

Welcome to Gardeners Tips Blog

The original post on 5th April 2008′ was entitled welcome to the Compost Heap.’

Food Safety in a Power Outage – Tips from Dr. Susan Barefoot - hgic.clemson.edu - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:35

Food Safety in a Power Outage – Tips from Dr. Susan Barefoot

I recently had a call from a South Carolina resident who lost power for more than 24 hours and wanted to know whether the foods in her freezer would be safe to eat. This is a very common problem in South Carolina winters and could easily affect you in the coming months.

Organic lawn care with paul tukey: crabgrass control, reducing compaction - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Canada - state Maryland
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:07

Organic lawn care with paul tukey: crabgrass control, reducing compaction

IF YOU ARE STILL USING any synthetic chemicals on your lawn, I hope you will stop. So does Paul Tukey. When he founded SafeLawns in 2006, Paul says, “It didn’t occur to people that their lawns could be dangerous.”“The sad reality is that we know that a lot of the chemicals used to grow the lawn (the fertilizers), or the chemicals used to control weeds or insects or fungal diseases—all  of these chemicals are designed to kill things, and they can make us very sick, and they make the water very sick, and the soil very sick, and the air very unhealthy.”Giving up chemicals doesn’t mean you have to pave over your front yard.“We will have lawns long after all these chemicals are banned in the United States, as they have been banned in Canada,” says Paul—explaining that more than 80 percent of Canadians cannot use weed and feed products, or glyphosate (the active ingredient in Roundup herbicide) because they are

Better beans, tough tomatoes, with prairie road organic seed - awaytogarden.com - Usa
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:56

Better beans, tough tomatoes, with prairie road organic seed

All of it will be grown organically, starting with organically farmed seed, like in her family farm and home garden (below).  “Our seed system is brittle,” says Theresa, who farms in Fullerton, North Dakota, on the cusp of Zone 3b and 4a. Not brittle in the way a perfectly dry seed must be to store well over the winter for next season–but brittle as in ecologically and politically fragile, and potentially broken.We’ve all heard: Years of industry consolidation by a few big corporations has reduced the d

Ray of catalog sun? more organic, non-gmo seeds - awaytogarden.com - state Washington
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:52

Ray of catalog sun? more organic, non-gmo seeds

UNLIKE MANY VEGETABLE CROPS we grow to eat—which are typically picked young and tender, and therefore grown for a shorter time—the same plant cultivated for a seed harvest must be grown to a much older age, requiring much more water, fertilizer, and chemical controls against pests and diseases.Seed crops are coddled, and regulations on chemical usage when raising them is also looser than on growing the same vegetable for the food market.Besides the pollution and waste of resources this results in, it fails to do something else really important: It yields seed strains that “expect “ this kind of pampering—not ones that are well-adapted to organic growing conditions in our home gardens, where we (hopefully!) don’t rush in with a chemical at every turn of events, or prop things up on synthetics instead of diligent care for our soil.Read More:

From the forum: organic weed control? - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:50

From the forum: organic weed control?

WHAT’S YOUR TACTIC FOR KILLING WEEDS WITHOUT CHEMICALS? That’s what member Megansgreen asked recently in the Urgent Garden Question Forum, because her driveway gets infested with grass (so does mine, and the front pathway, too). Got any tactics for chemical-free weed control? We’d love to hear.

Giveaway: vegetable-garden tips from c.r. lawn - awaytogarden.com - state Connecticut - state Maine - state Vermont
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:47

Giveaway: vegetable-garden tips from c.r. lawn

CRAZY, BUT TRUE: I ALWAYS THOUGHT the quirky “voice” of the Fedco Seeds catalog, named C.R. Lawn—get it? Lawn?—was a fictitious character, the made-up but pervasive green spirit of the longtime seed cooperative’s brand. But he’s not make-believe. He’s the Maine-based Fedco’s founder, and an organic gardener, market grower and seedsman with more than 30 years’ experience, and he took the time to answer some of my questions on what to grow and how to grow it better. The result is a vegetable-gardening Q&A (from peas to potatoes, lettuce, tomatoes, mineral dusts and more), with the very real C.R. Lawn—and the chance to win three $20 Fedco gift certificates I bought to share with you, and say thanks to him. Let’s jump right in:

Onions from seed: a success story - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:41

Onions from seed: a success story

Here’s the thing: At that price difference, even if you have barely moderate success with your seedlings, it’s to your advantage to try. What I found was that just like in those bundles of seedlings by mail, some of the transplants I grew myself were puny; others, though, got chunky and robust-looking.At a few dollars a packet, who cares about the runts? Toss them, or separate them out and plant a group of them to use as scallion substitutes. In my first-year experiment, I wasn’t ruthless like that, because I wanted to see what happened. The bigger starts basically

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
DMCA