The Home Garden
If you can, move the garden spot every 10 years or so to help keep
down diseases. Proper rotation and use of disease-resistant varieties
will help, but sooner or later the old garden spot becomes so full of
various disease spores and nematodes that you cannot grow a good crop
of many vegetables without use of special soil fumigants.
Soil should, of course, be well drained. Few vegetables can stand
"wet feet." A sandy loam with a clay subsoil is best. Heavy clay soils
may be made quite suitable by adding heavy quantities of stable manure
or compost, or by turning under cover crops, preferably legumes such as
vetch, clover soybeans.
Since the best quality quantity of vegetables cannot be duced on
anything but a fertile soil, do whatever is needed to make it fertile.
Requirements for growth.
1. Proper degree of heat.
2. Moisture.
3. Oxygen in the air is essential for seed germination and good growth.
English peas, for example, will sprout when soil termperature is
only a few degrees above freezing, while seed such as tomatoes will not
germinate at all.
To start these tender vegetables for early crops, artificial heat, as in hotbeds, is needed. Otherwise, for early crops, buy plants
from commercial growers, or from local growers who produce them with
artificial heat. Tender vegetables that do not transplant such as
melons, cucumbers, cantaloupes, and squash, should not be planted
outdoors until soil has warmed up. These may, however, be started
earlier in small pots in a hotbead.
To make the most out of your gardening
efforts, take time to do some planning. Also keep a record of wheather
you had too much or too little of certain vegatables at any time during
the season for a continuous supply. Don't trust it all to memory.
Things to consider when planting.
1. How much of each vegetable to grow to supply your family needs.
2. Which vegetables are most need for good health.
3. How much extra to plant for storage
4. Which varities are best to plant.
5. When to plant for continuous growth and supply.
6. Which pesticides are best for control of insects and diseases.
7. Supplies needed such as, sprayers, dusters, tools, fertilizer, or mulching material.
Jotting this down on paper, plus any notes made during the season
about special pest problems or how a new variety or practice turned out
, will be valuable the next season when planning and planting time roll around.
Charles French is a freenlance writer and webmaster for Decorating Country Home