garden plant

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 01-03-2010

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What is a specific plant a garden snail eat?

I'm doing a science project in which we ecosystem in a bottle with a plant and animal. I am investigating the use of garden snail, as our animals and all I can find that will eat lettuce and fruit, but I need a real plant that can grow in the bottle. Does anyone know what can I use? Besides, what should I do about water for the plant and the snail?

Hi KM, UPDATE, Good morning. Alnight rained here. I would like a little more information to help you. How big is the bottle? The amount of water depend on the size of the bottle. How long do you have? Some seeds of plants will have 2 weeks to arrive, and the snail will eat the plant's minute break the ground. Why not be used lettuce plants? Snails are broken (to eat) to the lettuce. I would go with lettuce and pepper plants. Add a few few drops of water if the bottle is included. I'm glad to hear about your science project. I really do not know where these plants would be obtained at this time of year. I have a large garden. Snails love pepper and eggplant leaves. Similarly, because the green coffee plants, but usually eat in growth (the middle) part of the plant before starting it. I really do not think the tomato plants will help. I've never had a problem with spiral tomato leaves. Will be excavated in the case of tomatoes that are on the ground. Do not use too much water. If one includes the bottle, you can get enough water, without irrigation. If you think otherwise, I will return to you sometime tomorrow. Having a good night. From Los Angeles

In the Garden, Spider plants, How to with Houseplants

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indoor garden

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 27-02-2010

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I live in NY and I am wondering about starting an indoor garden?

I live in upstate NY and would like to start in an indoor garden with herbs and vegetables. Is it okay to start the garden if they would be primarily indoors? What are your thoughts?

You can but there is some possibility that you will draw the attention of law enforcement on the lookout for marijuana grow houses.

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How to Create & Manage an Organic Garden : Starting an Indoor Organic Garden

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herb garden

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 18-02-2010

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Herb Gardening and the Seven Deadly Sins

When Herb gardening, first and foremost you must have a plan before you begin your endeavor. This is the first deadly sin herb gardeners commit consistently. You can grow an herb garden for cooking, or medicine or beauty. Choose which one will fulfill your needs, or have beds or containers for all three. If you are a beginner it is best to start off with just one so that you are not overwhelmed. You want this to be fun and creative, not a job you grow to hate.

The best way to come up with a plan is to concentrate on a theme. Then narrow it down to a sub-theme. Most people grow culinary herbs so let's start there. If you love French cooking plant the herbs that you will be using in your meals. French herbs are savory, marjoram, thyme, oregano and rosemary. Add some parsley and bay and you have the perfect bouquet garni to add to your soups or stews.

If you prefer classic Italian fare you should plant Italian parsley, marjoram, thyme, oregano and sweet basil. You can cook some great pasta dishes with these herbs.

After you have settled on your theme do a little research as to what herbs are available. You should come up with a list that has the absolutely essential herb, the herbs that would be fun to have and the ones that are really not necessary. Then check with your local nursery or online for availability. Again, if you are just starting out you should keep the list to between five and say ten herbs.

On to the next deadly sin that herb gardeners commit. You must have the perfect spot for your herbs to thrive. Consider the herbs needs-they must get four to six hours of sunlight daily. The soil needs to drain well and your garden should be where you can harvest your crop easily. If you have pets keep that in mind when picking your spot. You should mix in a lot of organic material to improve the soil whether it is in the ground or in containers.

The third deadly sin is to use the wrong planting method. You really have to work the soil with compost and bone meal before you even consider any planting. Carefully work through the root ball to encourage new growth. Be sure to water the roots well before planting to give them a good start. Herbs like basil should be pinched off to help them achieve a bushy plant.

You must know the needs of your herbs. Bad maintenance of the plants is the fourth deadly sin. On a regular basis you must water, prune and feed your herbs. Talk to the people at your nursery center to get advice on fertilizing your herbs. Never spray them with toxic chemicals if you find snails, aphids or beetles on the herbs. Here again, your nursery center can help you out. Here is a homemade recipe that will keep the pests out:

In a jar, combine 1 teaspoon dishwashing liquid and 1 cup vegetable oil. Shake vigorously. In an empty spray bottle, combine 2 teaspoons of this mixture and 1 cup water. Use at ten-day intervals (or more often if needed) to rid plants of whiteflies, mites, aphids, scales, and other pests.

The fifth most deadly sin is to fall madly in love with your plants. You need to cut your herbs. Harvest them at regular intervals. If you have an abundance of the herbs freeze them or dry them. A great way to use them is to make vinegars or oils, even soaps and bath preparations.

Don't get too high tech or overanalyze the situation. The whole purpose here is to connect with the earth. This is the sixth deadly sin of herb gardeners. Work the way nature does. Use natural products, work the soil, and keep it simple.

And, drum roll please, the seventh deadly sin is to not know as much as possible about each herb you have planted. Take the time to do the research. With just a little effort you will become quite knowledgeable and face it, it is the only way to approach herb gardening. Don't beat yourselves up if you make a few mistakes, just learn from them. The whole point is to have fun with your herb gardening and to make some great meals.

Happy Herb Gardening!

Copyright © Mary Hanna, All Rights Reserved.

This article may be distributed freely on your website and in your ezines, as long as this entire article, copyright notice, links and the resource box are unchanged.

Mary Hanna is an aspiring herbalist who lives in Central Florida. This allows her to grow gardens inside and outside year round. She has published other articles on Cruising, Gardening and Cooking. Visit her websites at Container Gardening and Herb Gardening You can read more of her articles at Article Bazaar

About the Author

Growing Herbs : How to Design an Herb Garden

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gardening

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 01-02-2010

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Mel Bartholomew - Introducing Square Foot Gardening

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flower garden

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 29-01-2010

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Tips on flowers in the flower garden?

I decided that I would like to start my own garden of flowers for beauty and for collect flowers and give people and sell them. Here are the flowers, I decided that I put in the garden. 1. Lily 2. Gladiolus 3. Roses 4. White daisies 5. Sun margaritas 6. Perhaps carnations 7. Perhaps sunflowers Does anyone have any suggestions to add to my list that are popular, beautiful flowers you buy? Thanks in advance.

Hello! You have lots of beautiful flowers listed above. Of those you have said, seems to have a garden Sun The first thing to do is come with a garden plan that lets you manage when things bloom, how big the plants get, which are high and low (which is not planting tall things right in front of the second short and dark) - that sort of thing - so when they come and flowering plants will have enough display throughout the season growth. Here's a plan that could give you a place to start. I'm assuming you're in a zone that allows planting of bulbs and perennials and annuals - And you have mostly sun, but perhaps a bit of partial shade (ferns, for example, definitely have shade). So at the front, you could plant low growth Phlox that blooms in spring and low growth. Or kill is another very pretty sweet (white flowers), also of low growth. In the center of the bed, which may have peony bushes (perennials), which are fairly easy to grow (plant in fall) and the good news is that you can find varieties that bloom early, mid to late spring. Are half-height - something like margaritas. The back, the plant can grow tall foxglove - these are biennial, so it also wants buy plants that are in bloom next spring - that way you can enjoy them the first season. This is just an idea about how to think of planning a garden, you can add in the spring bulbs that occur before all this, then sedums (Autumn Joy is beautiful in autumn) and chrysanthemums blooming in the fall. That way you will have the first end pretty flowers. You can put in their margaritas, too, but be sure to leave space for them, because they'll widespread. The lilies are bulbs, so they too can be planted by mid to late spring flowering "(it depends on what you get). Sunflowers are annuals, and you can get varieties large and small, so you decide where you want, and then buy the kind of place where guys. As the previous answer suggested, roses are quite difficult, since the name just from the garden, maybe that would be difficult to tackle right off the bat. Oh, and if you have a some shade, hostas are great. Impatiens (annual flowers) are beautiful - and both are easy to grow. Look at some online sites like perennial Bluestone, WhiteFlower Farms, John Scheepers (bulbs) and get some great ideas! You will have a great time - half the fun is planning everything. Virginia http://www.container-gardening- made-easy.com

The Most Beautiful Flower Garden

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gardening nursery

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 28-01-2010

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Gardening Inspirations - A Garden Tour with White Flower Farm Nursery Manager Barb Pierson

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garden plants

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 23-12-2009

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When planting garden plants there are many things to consider in order to complete with lush flowering plants and find a big garden. The color of the flowers, the timing of flowering and general landscaping are a big part of this, but perhaps the most important thing to consider is the amount of sunlight the plant needs.

When you are choosing your plants, you'll notice that the type of lighting is clearly marked in either the catalog or on a label on their own plant, if you are shopping locally. These tags indicate or partial shade, full shade or full sun. If you want your plants to their best, they really the plant needs in a place that gets the right amount of sun. If your plant needs full sun, this means you need to plant a garden location that receives at least six hours of direct sunlight during the day. That means sun that filters through any kind of shadow like a blanket of leaves or other plants. If you need partial shade then the sun can be filtered and plants that need shade can be planted in shady areas where they do well, but not for plants in full sun and they die.

Sometimes the labels that say something like - full sun or partial shade - and such is the case with digital. If you plan in a partially shady area will do well, but prefers the sun will do better the longer the area is sunny. If you give a place with plenty of water and where the soil is warm enough this beautiful plant will produce flowers all summer long.

In addition to planting in the right place, your garden plants need lots of food and water. In particular, when the garden in full sun, moisture levels in soil are very important. Fertilization is food for your plants and which have requirements especially nitrogen and phosphorus and some soils not provide sufficient and should therefore be of fertilizers.

Fertilizing should not be difficult and you can get the right fertilizer at the center of local garden. A good liquid fertilizer should work very well and just follow the instructions to the pot size or plant type.

If you have a large garden you may want to consider buying manure from a local farm or purchasing it at your garden center that you can usually find in bags of 50 pounds or less. Just spread it on the soil or mixing it in if not planted yet.

Most of the plants to be watered every day especially in the heat of summer but as the weather gets a little cooler that can go with any other day. Make sure the soil is moist but no standing water. Of course there are many types of plants that do not need much water, such as cacti and other succulents. These plants store water in stems and have few leaves to water loss is minimal. Other popular garden plants like pansies and irises lose moisture through their leaves and many flowers as needed to obtain moisture through the soil every day.

Yarrow, and Aloe Verbena not need much water and other types of vine like plants such as Wisteria Bougainvillea and that not require excessive watering either.

Your garden plants planted in the area of law and give them food and water throughout the growing period will help provide vibrant, lush garden you can be proud of fun and entertainment around!

About the Author:

Lee Dobbins writes for
Backyard Garden And Patio
where you can learn more about
planning and maintaining a garden
.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Giving Your Garden Plants The Best Chance For Success

How to Design a Perennial Garden : How to Plant Shrubs in a Perennial Garden

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plants gardening

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Posted by admin | Posted in Gardening | Posted on 04-12-2009

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plants gardening plants gardening

When ready to mix the ingredients for your container garden, make sure the soil is moist and workable. To determine this, take a handful, squeeze and let them fall. If the water comes out, is too wet, if it breaks, it's too dry. But if the land mass retains its shape or cracks just a bit when dropped, is well placed to work in your garden pots.

Make sure your garden, containers are clean when it starts. Soak used or new clay gardening pots overnight so they will not draw moisture from the soil after planting. This is a very important step when you are starting your life plants. If the boat draws moisture from the new plant will be private. Clean dirty clay pots with a stiff brush and hot soapy water. Clean garden pots will be much more attractive in your container garden.

Although redwood, cedar, cypress and gardening pots can be left natural, they can stained or painted. First clean the surfaces then apply one or two coats of stain or paint. Let dry completely before planting. Concrete metal, plastic, fiberglass and similar materials, we all need cleaning before planting your container garden.

Bringing potted plants to garden is very important when designing container gardens. Consider the shape of each container, color and texture for the color of flowers and foliage, and as the final size of each plant in your container garden. Do not choose material that is too small, and if you want a group of plants for a large container, select a sample of height for the center to give height and scale. Do not forget that you can plant vegetables in container gardens, try to incorporate them into your container garden design. And for a tasty addition to your herb garden container plant garden in containers or hanging baskets, their prescriptions will become wonderful.

In pots and pans under bulb and into the vat and the use of low-growing plants like fancy-leaf caladiums, petunias, verbena, Iantanas, Ageratum and begonias wax. Hyacinths, tulips, daffodils and are also appropriate. In high containers, plant specimens of geraniums, heliotrope, coleus, balsam, dwarf dahlias, fuchsia, and daisies. Reservation of container larger pots and boxes, trees and shrubs or roses.

As a gardener, consider the form of plants, particularly the evergreens which stand out boldly in the winter. Types rounded and clipped yews or arborvitae world, angular look well in containers. Holly or yew trees, cut into squares or pyramids, are best seen in circular tubs. This contrast of the curve with the straight always gives interest to the garden and the customers who visit their container garden.

The first step in pots for a gardener is to place sufficient drainage material in the bottom of each container garden, allowing water pass through freely, but not enough to interfere with the roots. An inch or two pieces of container (edges rounded upwards), or chips of bricks or tiles stones, gravel, pebbles, or cinders can be used. The larger the container, the largest of the pieces should be. Some gardeners spread a piece of sackcloth and a thick layer of sand on parts of large drainage. A layer of vermiculite or sphagnum moss over the drainage material is also good to keep the soil obstruction of the holes. If the holes clog the roots will drown in your pot garden.

Above the drainage, spread a layer of soil, amount, depending on size of container and plant root. Place the plant in position so that the soil surface shall be one inch (more for large plants) below the rim of the container. This space is needed to contain the water.

Fill in soil around the roots, firming gently with fingers or a wooden piece to remove air pockets. Add more soil and firm, but not make the soil too tightly to the roots of fine food should be able to penetrate easily.

Finally, water your garden container plants well, let drain. If the water passes through the pot garden very rapidly, press soil again for the company, which means there are air pockets. If the soil holds water too long, loosen a little.

Place the container garden in a place protected from sun and wind for the first week while the growth of new roots and adapt to new conditions. This also helps avoid the collision. Once your plants have settled in, ready to fix your container garden design according to its original container gardening.

Happy Container Garden!

Copyright © 2006 Mary Hanna All Rights Reserved.

This article may be distributed freely on your site web and in your ezines, as long as this entire article, copyright notice, links and resource box are unchanged.

Mary Hanna is aspiration a herbalist who lives in Central Florida. This allows her to grow gardens inside and outside all year. She has published other articles on Cruising, Gardening and kitchen. Visit his website at http://www.GardeningHerb.com http://www.CruiseTravelDirectory.com and http://www.ContainerGardeningSecrets.com or contact her at Mary @ Webmarketingreviews

About the Author:

About the Author
Mary Hanna is an aspiring herbalist who lives in Central Florida. This allows her to grow gardens inside and outside year round. She has published other articles on Cruising, Gardening and Cooking. Visit her websites at http://www.CruiseTravelDirectory.com, http://www.ContainerGardeningSecrets.com, and http://www.GardeningHerb.com or contact her at mary@webmarketingreviews.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - How to Plant Gardening Containers Or Gardening Pots In Your Container Garden

Sesame Street: Mrs. Obama Plants Garden

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