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Getting Ready For Spring Vegetable Gardening


There is something exciting about the warming days of spring. The earth is waking up from its winter slumber and home owners are busy bustling about in anticipation of spring vegetable gardening. If you are like most gardeners, you spend the cold and snowy winter days dreaming of spring vegetable gardening and thinking about just what you will plant. Follow these tips to get your spring vegetable gardening off to a great start.

Start Your Spring Vegetable Gardening In The Fall

Spring vegetable gardening actually begins in the fall. Plan for the following year by pulling out all of your plants after you are finished bringing in the harvest. When you let you spent plants winter in your garden you create a breeding ground for insects that can hurt your next years crop.

The fall is also a great time to work on compost for spring. Add the fall leaves that you rake to your compost pile and mix it with grass from the last time of the season you mow your lawn. If you dont have a compost pile, you can still turn your leaves into soil gold. Simply rake a large pile of leaves into a black, plastic lawn bag. Add a handful or two of 10-10-10 fertilizer and leave the bag in a place it will receive sun. In a few short months, you should have a nice bag of compost to till into your spring garden.

Work On Your Spring Vegetable Gardening All Winter

You can save a lot of money and get a jump on your spring vegetable gardening by starting seeds inside during the winter. You can usually buy one package of seeds for the same amount of money, or often less, than you would pay for one pony pack of transplants at a garden center. Another bonus in seed starting is that your plants are healthy and ready to go into the garden long before your local nursery is carrying seedlings. When you get a head start on spring planting, you get a head start on the harvest.

Simply plant seeds in peat pots and keep them warm by placing them on a seed mat or under a grow light. You can nurture your seedling indoor garden all winter until it is time to plant them in the spring. Just make sure that you harden the plants by letting them spend a few hours outside each day come warm weather. If you dont harden your plants in the spring, they will go into shock when you transplant them in the garden.

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If your family is lovers of such unusual vegetables like horseradish or pac choi, you can grow them easily when you are into this kind of vegetable gardening. Keep composting golden rules like no dairy products, no bones and no meat. You can also plant herbs in a spring vegetable garden. You can find many ways to stick to organic when you have home vegetable gardening as your hobby. Tomatoes, hot peppers, parsley, and even strawberries do very well in hanging baskets and look really nice through the entire growing season.


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There are plenty of places to find great gardening tips, from the Internet, gardening books, your local nursery and your next-door neighbor with a green thumb. You can help the composition of your soil by adding top soil, peat moss, and fertilizer to it. Adding compost to your garden can increase the growth and production of your vegetable plants, and improve their health as well.