Sunday, 17 April 2011

The Great Need Of Preparing Gardening Soil

By Vincent Boylendrico


When a gardener starts to prepare a new garden, whether it is a traditional outside vegetable or flower garden or if it is a container garden to grow in a condominium, making ready the gardening soil is the first and perhaps most significant part of the gardening process since it lays the foundation of all the plants that have to grow and flourish. Gardening soil not only holds the plant up by allowing the roots to grow deep down into it, but it also helps hold moisture that the roots drink from and contains the nutrients that allow the plants to grow healthy and strong.

Getting Ready

Before a garden is planted, there are a few supplies in which a gardener must gather in order to get ready the gardening soil. If he would like to do organic gardening, he needs to prepare at least a few weeks in advance and probably longer in order to start a compost pile from which he can gather the nutritious mulch for his garden. You can find mulches that can be bought in gardening supply stores, both organic and otherwise, so a gardener does not necessarily need to have his own. Nonetheless, compost piles are free to start and maintain, only require grass cuttings, leaves and organic kitchen scraps to be continuously laid upon it to decay and make mulch.

There are also a few tools that are important to prepare the gardening soil like shovels, hoes, and trowels for breaking up the dirt in the garden area so that it is no longer compacted but loose and free where the roots can grow. Sometimes the gardener has an option in where to put the garden, which is essential not only in the gardening soil which might be found in numerous places in the yard, but also in the amount of sunlight the garden will get, which can help to decide the kind of plants to grow in the garden.

Once the soil is broken up, then the mulch from the compost pile or store is mixed into the gardening soil so that it becomes richer in nutrients than the soil by itself. If it will be plants rather than seeds or seedlings that are going to be planted in the gardening soil, then fertilizer is sometimes added first if the soil is particularly devoid of nutrients and mulch isn't enough. When the gardening soil has been completely prepared, then it is time for the gardener to get the plants or seeds that he is going to plant in the garden.




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