7 Reasons to Garden Organically

Natural Gardening Is Healthy for People and the Environment

© Jamie McIntosh

Organic Gardener, Tim Samoff, flickr.com

Seven is a lucky number when you consider these reasons to switch to organic gardening methods.

Perhaps you’ve thought about switching to an organic gardening product after your last spraying session left you with a nasty tickle in your throat. Subject the chemicals in your garden shed to scrutiny, and you may be ready to make the switch sooner rather than later.

Easy

The gentle methods organic gardeners practice mean that even a beginner can achieve success in his first gardening season. You’re less likely to cause unintentional plant death when you work with nature instead of trying to beat it into submission.

Cost Effective

The best substance you can apply to your garden doesn’t come from a bottle; it comes from your compost bin. You have the power to make a perfect garden amendment from leaves, grass clippings, and food scraps that would otherwise go into the landfill. If you combine composting with handpicking garden pests and hand-digging weeds, you’re 2/3 the way to the best garden on the block at no cost.

Healthy Self

Gardeners enjoy America’s number one hobby because they want to nourish their bodies with homegrown vegetables and nourish their souls with vivid flowers and foliage. These desires are at odds with products like the weed killer 2,4-D that can cause severe skin and eye irritation. Working in the garden should be relaxing; it shouldn’t induce vomiting from breathing the fumes of the herbicide Fluazifop.

Healthy Children

Our most precious resource is at the greatest risk of harm from the garden chemicals we use. Children spend more time outdoors, and they come into closer contact with the soil and growing things than adults. The developing organs and nervous system of children are more vulnerable to toxins than those of adults. Finally, the mere presence of garden chemicals in our garden sheds increases the chances of an accidental poisoning.

Healthy Workers

Some people argue that companies that manufacture conventional herbicides and pesticides are important to the economy, as they provide jobs. However, we must consider the health hazards these workers face on the job, as they may be at risk for acute and chronic toxicities from chemical exposure. For example, the Environmental Protection Agency classifies the fungicide Mancozeb as a probable carcinogen to humans. We can create more jobs in the organic sector by voting with our dollars when we purchase organic products.

Clean Water

Unless you live in a tent, you live on a watershed. This means that the storm water that drains away from the hard surfaces on your property will eventually reach a natural waterway. This runoff can carry garden chemicals along with it, posing a hazard to fish. Soluble products that aren’t readily held by the soil pose the greatest threat, as they can migrate easily into groundwater supplies. Examples of insecticides toxic to fish include Diazinon used for general insect control and Dimethoate used for aphids and thrips.

Concern for Wildlife and Pets

When you observe Fido sniffing around your tree, your first thought may not wander to the Lindane you applied last week for borer control. It should. This is but one of many conventional garden chemicals that is highly toxic to mammals, including our pets and the wildlife we seek to attract.

Resource:

Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service


The copyright of the article 7 Reasons to Garden Organically in Organic Gardens is owned by Jamie McIntosh. Permission to republish 7 Reasons to Garden Organically must be granted by the author in writing.




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