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How To Grow Fresh Delicious Vegetables
No Matter Where You Live!
A more organic method of weed management when it comes to creating space for plant beds is a gardening technique called “Double digging.” Double digging is a gardening technique, where the soil is loosened in two layers, and organic material is added. Double digging is very labor-intensive but has been known to double the harvests of certain plants and is especially good for root crops like carrots, potatoes and beets.1
Here are some sites that give instructions on how to double dig:
The optimal composition of the soil used in your garden will vary depending on what you plant and for the best harvest you should to refer to more in-depth articles and books about vegetable gardening. Some of these resources will be listed at the end of the article. If you want to get really technical regarding the composition of the soil in your back yard, there are several tests on the market that will tell you the nutritional composition of your soil, including your soil’s pH level and its levels of NPK (Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium; macronutrients necessary for plant growth). One of the most popular and inexpensive kits is the Luster Leaf 1601 Rapitest Soil Test Kit. Almost all soil can benefit from the use of compost. Compost is decomposed organic material.2
The following website provides more information on how to create plant-based compost at home:
Now comes the fun part: deciding which vegetables you’d like to grow! There are many factors that should be considered when choosing possible vegetables. The first is what based on your own taste buds. What will you actually eat? The second is based on what climate (plant hardiness) zone you live in. What is the point of plant hardiness zones? They "...help you know which plants will grow where you live, so you don't plant things that will soon die just because they can't manage your region's temperatures. Plants vary in the temperature extremes they can endure.” 3
Climate zone map: http://www.weekendgardener.net/climate-zones-map.htm The third factor is which season the plants grow best in and how long they will take to grow. The length of time that a plant takes to grow is important because even though a plant may be able to grow in a certain climate/hardiness zone, it may only be able to grow during a certain part of the year because it can’t stand the colder temperatures of that particular climate zone. We’ll get you started with a list of different vegetables, how long they take to grow, and what climate zones they grow best in.
“Dried” beans (examples include: pinto, navy, kidney, black-eyed, garbanzo, adzuki, hyacinth, and mung beans)
Asparagus
Eggplant
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