Brown Thumb Gardener Mistakes

Avoid Dead or Sick Plants in the Organic Garden

© Jamie McIntosh

Sick Plants, flickr.com

Gardeners can turn brown thumbs into green thumbs by avoiding some common oversights, missteps, and costly failures in the organic lawn and garden.

There’s a steep learning curve for gardeners new to the hobby. Some organic gardeners were lucky enough to grow up in the shadow of a grandmother who lovingly tended her heirloom vegetables, or a father who grew legendary peaches in his orchard. For the rest of us, embarrassing gardening mistakes often precede the fragrant blooms and lush vegetables we desire.

If you take curmudgeonly pride in your brown thumb, adhere to the following 10 sick plant guidelines. If you wish to reap the green rewards of your gardening investment, take the advice that follows.

It’s tempting to ignore the planting instructions that come on the label of transplants that boast only a few leaves. However, if the label instructs you to space your new perennials 18 inches apart, do it. Otherwise, plan to spend the following season digging up your overcrowded plants and relocating them.

Remove no more than 1/3 of the grass blades when you mow the lawn. Each blade of grass is an individual plant, and scalping the lawn weakens it. Mowing the grass short exposes weed seeds to sunlight, encouraging their germination.

Gardeners get so excited on the first warm day of the season, many rush out with their tillers to get a jump on the growing season. Working the soggy soil of spring thaw turns soil into concrete clods.

Pesticides can damage beneficial insects as well as pests. Start with the least damaging organic control method targeted to the pest.

Growing the same vegetables in the same spot year after year allows plant pests and diseases to build up in the soil. Divide your garden into quadrants, and move vegetables in the same family to a different quadrant each year.

Excessive fertilizer can burn plants. Consider all possible sources of plant decline: get a soil test, ensure that the plant is free of microscopic pests, and confirm that you’ve given the plant the soil and light it requires.

Few transplants can compete with a well-established lawn on top of compacted soil. Pamper your plants with their own bed of fluffy soil mixed with ample amounts of humus.

Gardeners who throw their lawn and garden clippings away deny themselves free organic matter essential for composting. If you haven’t started your compost pile yet, leave grass clippings on the lawn for a nitrogen boost.

Deep mulch around tree trunks encourages rodents to take up residence. Pile a 3-inch layer of mulch around trees, and pull it back from the trunk to discourage rot and mice.

Polypropylene weed fabrics are unattractive, so many choose to hide them with mulch. Unfortunately, as the mulch breaks down, weed seeds germinate right on top of the mulch, forming a tangled mess of roots and fabric. Use a mulch composed of organic materials that will enrich the soil as it breaks down, like compost or shredded bark.


The copyright of the article Brown Thumb Gardener Mistakes in Organic Gardens is owned by Jamie McIntosh. Permission to republish Brown Thumb Gardener Mistakes must be granted by the author in writing.


Sick Plants, flickr.com
       


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