OrganicGreenhouses.com
-- Water Gardens -- Greenhouse Gardening -- Specialty Gardening -- Gardening Resources -- Garden Decor --
 
You are here: home > articles > organic gardening

Organic Gardening
The basics of organic gardening and its benefits for you and the environment. Organic gardening is growing and treating vegetables and fruits with things only found in nature. Some of the best reasons to consider organic gardening are as follows:

Posted Wednesday, January 18, 2006

e-mail E-mail this page   print Printer-friendly page

Organic gardening is growing and treating vegetables and fruits with things only found in nature.

Some of the best reasons to consider organic gardening are as follows:

1.One can easily make compost from garden and kitchen waste. Though this is a bit more time-consuming than buying prepared chemical pesticides and fertilizers, it certainly helps to put garbage to good use and so saves the environment.

2. Organic farming does not use chemicals that may have an adverse affect on your health. This is especially important when growing vegetables. Chemical companies tell us that the chemicals we use are safe if used according to direction, but research shows that even tiny amounts of poisons absorbed through the skin can cause such things as cancer, especially in children.

On the average, a child ingests four to five times more cancer-causing pesticides from foods than an adult. This can lead to various diseases later on in the child's life. With organic gardening, these incidents are lessened.

Remember, pesticides contain toxins that have only one purpose - to kill living things.

3. Less harm to the environment. Poisons are often washed into our waterways, causing death to the native fish and polluting their habitat. Organic farming practices also help prevent the loss of topsoil through erosion. The Soil Conservation Service says that an estimated 30 - 32 billion tons of soil erodes from United States farmlands every year.

4. Cost savings. One does not need to buy costly chemical fertilizers and pesticides with organic gardening. Many organic recipes for the control of pest and disease come straight from the kitchen cupboard. Sometimes other plants can be grown as companions to the main crop. An example of this is the marigold, which helps to repel aphids from vegetables.

Mixing 1 tablespoon of liquid dishwashing soap and 1 cup of cooking oil can make a cheap garden pest spray. Put 3 tablespoons of this mixture in 1 quart of water and spray on plants.

5.A simple mulch of pine needles will help to suppress the growth of weeds as well as keeping the moisture in.

6. Organic gardening practices help to keep the environment safe for future generations.

e-mail E-mail this page   print Printer-friendly page


 

More Tips


Latest articles in ARTICLES

Build a Rain Garden

Introduction to Aquaponics

10 Free Gardening Products

Vegetable Gardens & Organic Matter
 

  Browse more...
ARTICLES
RESOURCES
ABOUT US
 

Copyright 2006 a gardenguides.org website. All rights reserved.
a GardenGuides.org sitei