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Articles about Vegetable Crops for the Garden
Choosing a Site For Your Home Vegetable Garden
Double Your Crops
Getting Children Interested in Growing Vegetables
Grow Your Own Salad
Growing Vegetable Plants Becomes More Than Just A Hobby
Learning About Indoor Container Vegetable Gardening
List of vegetable crops by difficulty
Non Hybrid Seeds For Survival Gardening
Organic Container Gardening - Simple and Easy Ways to Grow Vegetables and Flowers in Pots
Organic Vegetable Cultivation Table
Over Wintering Chilli Pepper Plants
pH preferences of food crops
Vegetable Crops in alphabetical order by name
How to grow organic Asparagus
How to grow organic Aubergines
How to grow organic Beetroot
How to grow organic Broad beans
How to grow organic Broccoli
How to grow organic Brussels sprouts
How to grow organic Cabbage
How to grow organic Calabrese
How to grow organic Carrot
How to grow organic Cauliflower
How to grow organic Celeriac
How to grow organic Celery
How to grow organic Celtuce
How to grow organic Chinese broccoli
How to grow organic Chinese cabbage
How to grow organic Chicory
How to grow organic Corn
How to grow organic Cucumbers and Gherkins
How to grow organic Endive
How to grow organic Florence fennel
How to grow organic French beans
How to grow organic Garlic
How to grow organic Globe artichokes
How to grow organic Jerusalem artichokes
How to grow organic Kale and borecole
How to grow organic Kohl rabi
How to grow organic Komatsuna
How to grow organic Land cress
How to grow organic Leaf beet
How to grow organic Leeks
How to grow organic Lettuce
How to grow organic Mizuna
How to grow organic Mustard greens
How to grow organic New Zealand spinach
How to grow organic Onions
How to grow organic Parsnips and Hamburg Parsley
How to grow organic Peas
How to grow organic Peppers (hot and sweet)
How to grow organic Potatoes
How to grow organic Radishes
How to grow organic Rocket
How to grow organic Runner beans
How to grow organic Salad onions
How to grow organic Salsify, Scorzonera and Scolymus
How to grow organic Seakale
How to grow organic Shallots
How to grow organic Spinach
How to grow organic Squash
How to grow organic Swede
How to grow organic Texsel greens
How to grow organic Tomatoes
How to grow organic Turnips
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Organic Gardening:
Choosing a Site For Your Home Vegetable Garden
by Harold Baldwin
Looking for something else?
Home vegetable gardens are beautiful! They add a feel to a home that no other types of plants can ever add. There is no need to hide them in the backyard or similar, as your parents may have done.
Most of us won't have a lot of choices when looking for a spot. Even at my house, with my nearly thirty acres, I only have a few possible spots. It needs to be near the house for ease of watering and to keep down pests like deer and raccoons, have good sunlight, and reasonably good soil. In fact I only one small area with decent sunlight due to all the trees and no naturally fertile soil so I fertilize with manure.
Sun and Exposure:
The most important consideration is sun. Pick a spot that catches sunshine early and holds it late. South or east sloping ground is ideal. If it's out of the direct path of the chilling north and northeast winds it's even better. If a building or even a fence protects it from this direction, it's an enormous benefit as it can help your garden get an early start in the spring. You can always add a small and simple board fence or a hedge of low-growing shrubs. Protection from the north and northeast can help a lot and it's importance is often underestimated.
Soil
You probably don't have perfect soil and you don't need it. Vegetables don't need perfect, so don't be too worried about it. Chances are you will not find a spot of ideal soil ready for use anywhere upon your place, but you can even grow vegetables in overly sandy or boggy soil with proper treatment.
The ideal garden soil is a "rich, sandy loam." But we can't overemphasize that such soils usually are made, not found. "Rich" in the gardener's vocabulary means full of plant food. Soil can easily be made rich and kept rich in several ways. For example you can easily add manure or plant food to the soil.
Ideal garden soil also needs drainage. The term "sandy" in often used, means the soil containing enough particles of sand so that water will drain through it without leaving it pasty and sticky a few days after a rain. Soil with good drainage will be "light," so that it crumbles and falls apart readily after being pressed in the hand. Note that good soil will not usually be sandy in appearance despite containing sand.
Don't let the absence of perfect conditions stop you from starting a vegetable garden. Even a garden with mediocre exposure and less than perfect soil can yield a decent crop of veggies and add to the beauty of your home.




