When an organic gardener gets the first whiff of spring, whether it’s the verdant smell of rain mixing with thawed soil, or whether it’s the distant fragrance of hyacinth wafting to the nostrils, something happens. A giddy sort of smile involuntarily spreads across your face. You find yourself making an unauthorized stop at the nursery on the way home from work, and suddenly your trunk is filled with three flats too many of flowers you don’t have time to plant. However, staying out after dark, you make time.
Then, the dog days of summer reveal best laid plans gone to waste. Was the weather uncooperative, or did a plague of armyworms wreak havoc on your lawn? Perhaps the problem was not enough organization to temper the inspiration. This year, implement one of the following tips in your organic garden, and ensure that your flowers and vegetables look as glorious on Labor Day as you imagined they could be on St. Patrick’s Day.
An old adage shares that the best fertilizer is a gardener’s shadow. Although few of us have as much time to spend in our gardens as we’d like, a conscious effort to spend at least 5 minutes a day tending the garden goes a long way. In fact, it’s better for an organic gardener to spend 10 minutes a day on small garden tasks than to spend 2 hours on the weekend tending the same tasks.
Consider the usual problems all gardeners face, and how regular tending places the organic gardener at an advantage over the weekend warrior. If a few weed seeds germinate on Monday, those plants may have a tenacious hold on the soil by Saturday. On your daily weed plucking rounds, keep an eye out for signs of garden pests. Early intervention efforts enable you to use gentler methods like handpicking, before pests multiply out of control.
It’s easy to get blindsided by lovely new plant introductions when the garden catalogs start arriving in your mailbox. Sometimes these new plants are rather expensive, as the propagation efforts of nurserymen can’t keep up with consumer demand.
Instead of impulsively falling for the alluring catalog descriptions of these new plants, consider adding some native plants to your landscape. Don’t confuse native with weedy or boring. Many native plants attract butterflies and other beneficial insects. Organic gardeners will like the fact that natives require little or no supplemental water, fertilizer, or pest control. Contact your local county extension office for native plant recommendations.
All organic gardeners have a “problem spot” in their lawn and garden. Maybe it’s that shady spot you must over seed with grass each fall. Perhaps it’s an area that gets marshy in the spring, infecting various plants with rot, mildew, or black spot. Give yourself permission to lose that battle, in order that you may win the war.
Instead of cursing the patchy grass under the tree, install a rugged groundcover that thrives in lean soil and shade, such as dead nettle. Instead of sacrificing pricy perennials to rot and mildew, plant a bog garden. If the boggy area isn’t conspicuous, make it the home of a new compost pile. In other words, when life gives the organic gardener lemons, make lemonade.