Oneworldbiz.Net/Gardening tips

Flower Gardening Section


Welcome to Oneworldbiz.Net/Gardening tips

Article

Gardening - Natural Science Not Rocket Science...
Linda Gray

Don't force yourself out of the most profitable hobby in the universe because you think it's too hard to learn ...It isn't!

Gardening is fast becoming the world's number one hobby, and with all the latest 'alternative' information we have to hand, gardening as a natural science is fun to learn about and rewarding in the extreme...

Produce your own fruit and veg - cut the shopping trips.

Keep it organic!- be nice to the planet, and your body.

Stay fit and healthy with exercise and fresh air.

Spend quality family time in the outdoors.

Turbo boost your creative spirit

And if that isn't enough to be going on with, learn about plant-kind in all it's glory. From trees through to fungi, there are millions of plants to research, grow and eat- no chance of getting bored!

First you have to take your first step.

Start gardening, be a gardener, enjoy your garden.

Starting from scratch? Let your imagination run wild. Stand in the centre (-ish) of your garden and imagine..close your eyes if you like.

Don't hold back. Let your creative thoughts flow. How much can you do with your space? Don't imagine for one minute that a simple lawn will let you off the hook here. A lawn needs maintaining, and mowing regularly - for EVER...and it can get kind of boring to look at as well! How about creating

a butterfly patch

a wildflowers corner

a vegetable plot

a herb garden

a water feature

Then you will need a shed to store your tools. Where would that be best placed in your garden? Don't waste a sunny position with a garden structure. Sheds don't need to be in full sun to survive!

Is there enough space to place garden furniture? Rather than going for the table-and-four-chairs-on-patio style, can you place benches and small tables in semi-shady spots near the honeysuckle or round the herbs?

When you think you have a reasonable idea of all you want from your garden, take some notes and think about it for a while. Don't leap in too soon-more often than not you'll land up doing the same job twice. Browse through garden catalogs, take a little time and do a little planning.

But not for too long! Don't let the ideas wither into another was-gonna-do-one-day file.

If you have enough of a budget to buy your garden structures and furniture, do this first, and position them in your garden. Then create your flower beds, vegetable plots and wildlife patches around these structures.

If you don't have cash up front, don't worry. The things you need will come to you. For now, prepare the space as if you DID have the shed, or bench or whatever, and work around these areas.

Start all the patches and work on them as and when you can, or start one patch and get it finished before moving on to the next. How you work in your garden depends on a number of things...

size of land and budget

helping hands available

seasons and the weather

time slots and energy levels!

Treat gardening as an ongoing hobby rather than a project to be started and finished. Plants are growing life forms and will always be changing the shape and feel of your garden. Go with it where you can, and prune heavily where you have to!

Get the kids involved with quick-germinating seeds, and fast-growing plants. Many retailers offer special seed mixtures for kids. Pumpkins are great for getting the kids interested in gardening.

Learn about edible flowers and teach the children what can and can't be eaten - and why.

Don't let the grass grow under your feet. Get in on the action now. Turn off the TV, put your wellies on and leap into nature!


About the Author: Linda Gray is a freelance writer and, with her partner. has spent ten years renovating a neglected acre of woodland. Find heaps of straight gardening advice and pots of inspiration at http://www.flower-and-garden-tips.com

Source: www.isnare.com



Flower Gardening Best products


Flower Gardening News

flower gardening

According to the Alzheimer’s Association 2008 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures report, more than 40 percent of the 10 million American unpaid caregivers rate the emotional stress of caregiving as high or very high. However, according to a ...

Read more


Gardening Reduces Stress For Alzheimer's Caregivers - eMaxHealth.com

Ashes to ashes The glorious autumn displays should be inspirational enough to think about planting more trees. David overend suggests a candidate – the mountain ash. Blowing the tuber's trumpet potatoes david overend hails the humble spud – but ...

Read more


Gardening » - yorkshirepost

Glen Ridge, N.J. - Gifted amateurs – with no background in horticulture or floral design – can learn to create inspired flower arrangements. Tim Mannion and Gordon Frey of St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Montclair, N.J., are perfect examples ...

Read more


Petal power: creating joy in a vase - Christian Science Monitor

ARNHEIM, Mich. - Deanna Sue Karvonen, 45, of Arnheim, passed away Monday, November 17, 2008, at her residence following a lengthy illness. She was born in Cleveland, Ohio on December 17, 1962, the daughter of the late Spence and Marilyn (Chaney ...

Read more


Deanna Sue Karvonen - Daily Mining Gazette

Helen Irene Schroetter, 74, loving wife, mother and grandmother, of Spotsylvania County departed this life Monday, Nov. 17, 2008, at Carriage Hill Health & Rehab Center after an extended illness. Born in Orange County Dec. 20, 1933, Helen was the ...

Read more


NATS NOTES - Free Lance-Star

Stearns Farm sits in the rural outskirts of Boston, Massachusetts, on the edge of a great swathe of beautiful conservation land bequeathed to the Sudbury Valley Trustees by Margaret Welch in 1975. This organically run vegetable, herb and flower farm ...

Read more


Stearns community farm: Earth mother guided by the moon - Daily Telegraph

John and Janell Sweeney of Bethel Acres are celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary at a come-and-go reception from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 23 at Lakeview Church of Christ. The couple was married Oct. 31, 1958, in the home of Janell’s parents ...

Read more


Sweeney — 50th wedding anniversary - Shawnee News-Star

Q:I didn't get around to reseeding this fall, nor have I put down any fertilizer. If it's not too late, what type of fertilizer would you suggest? Answer: While it is too late to reseed, late November is a great time to apply fertilizer. One of the ...

Read more


GARDENING Q&A - Richmond Times-Dispatch

MANISTEE, Mich. -- Jack Delbert Garman, 78, of 10600 Indian Trail Drive, died Tuesday (Nov. 18, 2008) in West Shore Medical Center after a short illness. He was born Feb. 9, 1930, in Elkhart, Ind., to John Earl and Myrtle Goldie (Martin) Garman. On ...

Read more


JACK D. GARMAN - Elkhart Truth

Joan Marie Wolfe, age 73, of Alma , Michigan , passed away on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at the University of Michigan Hospital due to complications from cancer treatment. Ten members of Joan's family were by her side when she died. Visitation for ...

Read more