- Organic Gardening 101
- by: Gwen Nyhus Stewart
Organic gardening is not
just the avoidance of chemicals, in the larger view, it is organic
living using natures laws. I read this quote by an
unknown person sometime ago and realized that my parents and
others like them were organic gardeners long before the current
resurrection of these principles.
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They didnt use chemicals
on the food they would feed to their children and gardening was
a part of daily living to ensure there was sufficient food to
preserve for the long winters. Everything was re-cycled and kitchen
scraps were routinely thrown onto the garden to replenish the
earth. Organic fertilizers such as manure were used and the only
fertilizer on the roses was bone meal. My mother and father produced
the best tasting vegetables and lots of them enough to
feed a family of seven throughout the winter. Birds, worms, and
other signs of a living earth were welcomed into the garden.
In recent times synthetic chemical
fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides have become the practice
most common among commercial agricultural practices. These practices
have had some undesirable results such as the loss or depletion
of topsoil, land becomes less fertile, and the excessive use
of pesticides has resulted in pests resistant to the current
chemicals resulting in the development of even stronger chemicals.
Our environment is being damaged by toxic chemical spills, chemicals
leaching into rivers and water supplies are contaminating our
drinking water, and the effect of global warming is becoming
a major part of the political agenda. |
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Our personal diet and health is
a major topic of importance as more attention is being paid to
the relationship between food and health. Research has demonstrated
that organically grown vegetables are higher in vitamins and
minerals than those grown with inorganic fertilizers. Gardening
organically and growing as much of our own food as possible is
one of the steps we can take to start healing the earth on which
we live and in the process healing ourselves. Several key components
are fundamental to the practice of organic gardening.
Practical Steps to Organic
Gardening
1. Soil. The soil is kept healthy by working with
Nature rather than against it. Practices include using organic
fertilizers such as manure to replenish the earth and all refuse
produced by the garden should be recycled back into the garden.
Organic gardening uses all of the waste produced in the garden
such as grass clippings, leaves, and leftovers from the kitchen
to make compost that feeds the soil and keeps it full of the
nutrients necessary to grow crops.
2. Avoid the use of all synthetic chemical fertilizers,
herbicides, and pesticides. Eliminating the use of chemicals
in the garden allows gardeners to not worry about children, pets,
and wildlife coming in contact with synthetic weed killers and
fertilizers on the lawn and shrubs. The food grown is pesticide-free,
additive-free, and nutritious food for the table.
3. Sustainability. In his book, Gardening Organically,
John Fedor defines sustainability as the ability of a society
or an ecosystem to function indefinitely without squandering
the resources on which it relies. Organic gardening does
this by ensuring there is no loss of nutrients or topsoil in
the garden.
4. Environmental Stewardship. Gardening organically
means that the environment benefits from the reduction in contamination
of the water supply and air pollution. It means that we provide
a habitat for wildlife including beneficial insects and animals.
5. Wildlife-friendly Habitats. Informal areas can
be created to assist wildlife in their search for habitat where
they can survive the destruction of many areas; destructions
that have now endangered many species.
6. Intensive planting. Plants are spaced closely
together to conserve water and shield the soil from sunlight
thus helping to prevent weed seeds from germinating and growing.
7. Biodiversity. Biodiversity ensures that when a
change in growing conditions occurs, a single crop from a monoculture
does not lead to a crop failure. The food supply does not become
jeopardized when a diversity of species are planted.
8. Rotating Crops. Crop rotation assists in the
control against soil-borne pests and diseases. This rotation
makes a difference in the productivity of the garden as those
diseases that affect the plants are kept in check by the rotation
of the crops to other areas of the garden.
9. Watering and Weeding. Rainwater can be saved to
water the garden. Soaker hoses, drip irrigation, and watering
by hand conserve water. Mulches are invaluable in both water
conservation and slowing down weed germination.
10. Saving Seeds. Save some seeds from your best plants
when harvesting crops. Many old varieties are being lost at an
alarming rate and preserving this biodiversity is important.
Some of these saved seeds have been used to develop new strains
after disaster has affected commonly cultivated varieties. |