August 19, 2009
Organic Vegetable Gardening is Easy in Containers
Organic is a hot word at the grocery store now days and that means that the price of organic fruits and vegetables is on the rise. It is no wonder organic vegetables are popular. Not only are they healthier for you, they taste better too. Now you can stop paying high prices for the organic vegetables offered to you at the supermarket and start organic vegetable gardening in containers.
Containers Take the Guess Work Away
Organic vegetable gardening in containers is easier than the traditional way of growing things in the garden because you know exactly what kind of soil you are dealing with. When you practice organic vegetable gardening in containers, you can mix your own potting soil and make sure that it is disease free. You can be confident that the soil you are planting your vegetables in doesn’t contain any leeched chemicals from pesticides or pollutants.
Organic vegetable gardening in containers also allows you to control the exact nutrients that go into each container. Tomatoes like calcium, so you can mix in powdered milk with your soil and have a gorgeous crop. Root vegetables love loose and sandy soil. When you practice organic vegetable gardening in containers, you can fill a cute wooden box with a nice mix of sandy loam and get beautiful carrots, radishes, and turnips. If you want to plant a vegetable or even a fruit that prefers a more acidic soil, add a little sulfur to the soil before you plant your crop.
Containers Contain Pests and Disease
Organic vegetable gardening in containers is a great way to fight pests that infest your vegetable garden. Container gardens are less likely to attract the large amount of garden pests that a traditional garden does, so you will immediately notice a difference in your pest control regime. When you container garden it is easier to pick pests off by hand, leaving your plants free of insecticides. Another added bonus of organic vegetable gardening in containers is that your plants are all separated, so it is harder for destructive bugs to move from one plant to another.
Organic vegetable gardening in containers also makes it easy to contain disease. If one of your plants gets sick, it won’t contaminate the others, because it doesn’t share any soil with other plants. It is also easy to remove the plant and entire container from the area where your other plants are. Isolating a plant gives you a chance to try and treat it organically without losing any of your other plants.
Filed under Gardening by Brian

