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Featured gardening article from our library:
The Growing Of Vegetable Plants
A vegetable garden is admittedly a part of any home place that has a good rear area. A purchased vegetable is never the same as one taken from a man's own soil and representing his own effort and solicitude.
It is essential to any satisfaction in vegetable-growing that the soil be rich and thoroughly subdued and fined. The plantation should also be so arranged that the tilling can be done with wheel tools, and, where the space will allow it, with horse tools. The old-time garden bed consumes time and labor, wastes moisture, and is more trouble and expense than it is worth.
The rows of vegetables should be as long and continuous as possible, to allow of tillage with wheel tools. If it is not desired to grow a full row of any one vegetable, the line may be made up of several species, one following the other, care being taken to place together such kinds as have similar requirements; one long row, for example, might contain all the parsnips, carrots, and salsify. One or two long rows containing a dozen kinds of vegetables are usually preferable to a dozen short rows, each with one kind of vegetable.
It is well to place the permanent vegetables, as rhubarb and asparagus, at one side, where they will not interfere with the plowing or tilling. The annual vegetables should be grown on different parts of the area in succeeding years, thus practicing something like a rotation of crops. If radish or cabbage maggots or club-root become thoroughly established in the plantation, omit for a year or more the vegetables on which they live.
It is by no means necessary that the vegetable-garden contain only kitchen-garden products. Flowers may be dropped in here and there wherever a vacant corner occurs or a plant dies. Such informal and mixed gardens usually have a personal character that adds greatly to their interest, and, therefore, to their value. One is generally impressed with this informal character of the home-garden in many European countries, a type of planting that arises from the necessity of making the most of every inch of land. It was the writer's pleasure to look over the fence of a Bavarian peasant's garden and to see, on a space about 40 feet by 100 feet in area, a delightful medley of onions, pole beans, peonies, celery, balsams, gooseberries, coleus, cabbages, sunflowers, beets, poppies, cucumbers, morning-glories, kohl-rabi, verbenas, bush beans, pinks, stocks, currants, wormwood, parsley, carrots, kale, perennial phlox, nasturtiums, feverfew, lettuce, lilies!
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Jarvis Varnado Swats 9 - Eyewitness News
STARKVILLE, Miss. (AP) -- Barry Stewart had a season-high 17 points,
and Dee Bost added 14 points and seven assists, to lead Mississippi State
to a 78-49 victory over Louisiana-Monroe Monday night. The Bulldogs (2-0)
shot 50 percent from the field in ...
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If there's a plant nerd on your holiday gift list, here's a
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Pasco County briefs: Garden Club offers Christmas tips - St.
Petersburg Times
The Land O' Lakes Garden Club will meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday at
the Land O' Lakes Community Center, 5401 Land O' Lakes Blvd.
Marge Vanyur will demonstrate how to craft a Christmas poinsettia from pine
cones and magnolia leaves. All members are asked to ...
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Experts offer composting tips - Register-Guard
Master Gardener volunteer Tom Bettman planted his first garden in
1973. “I’ve been composting for a long, long time,” he told a
gathering of 12 people who came for the last free compost workshop of the
year at FOOD for Lane County’s ...
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Designing a Garden Bed - KYW News radio
If you’re determined to plant your first flower garden this spring
but are overwhelmed with how to begin the process, here are some tips.
First, decide where you’re going to plant the garden. Take into
consideration how much sun your garden will ...
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