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You are here: Home / Archives for Gardening tips

Ten Websites to Get Expert Tips on Gardening

by Trish

The internet is a valuable resource for all gardeners. Whether you have never planted anything before or are an expert gardener, there is always something to learn. The ten sites below offer expert information for gardeners of all levels. From plant databases to planting schedules to tutorials on a variety of subjects, there is truly something for everyone on these sites.

Gardening With Angus

A presenter for “Gardening Australia,” Angus Stewart offers helpful gardening tips, videos and articles about plants and gardening on his website. The site also offers the Find a Plant Database. This database contains information on many native Australian plants and flowers as well as high-quality photographs of these plants.

Aussie Gardening

This is a must-visit site for gardeners in Australia. In addition to expert articles, the site includes a forum, a seed exchange, an Australian gardening directory, a plant search database and information on plant identification.

Lifestyle.com.au

The garden section of this lifestyle site is a great resource for everyone from novice gardeners to well-informed gardening enthusiasts. Resources include information, gardening ideas, expert gardening advice, instructional videos and more. The site also has an active gardening forum where users can share gardening ideas and tips and find answers to questions.

The Global Garden

Australia’s first online gardening magazine, the Global Garden is a free resource serving Australia and all areas with similar climates. In addition to articles written by knowledgeable gardeners, the site features a variety of resources including a question and answer column, a gardening community and various helpful gardening guides.

Kitchen Gardeners International

A community of gardeners from over 100 different countries, Kitchen Gardeners International is focused on growing food. The site contains many resources including expert tips and multiple ways to connect with avid gardeners around the world.

Gardens Online

This popular gardening site includes a plant database, articles, an online store, calendars, a glossary and diagnostics for common garden problems. In addition to written content, Gardens Online offers instructional podcasts and videos.

Sustainable Gardening Australia

An extremely popular gardening destination, this site offers information and resources for sustainable gardening.

Dave’s Garden

Containing the largest plant database and reference guide in the world, this is a site that every gardener should bookmark. It has listings and photographs for 191,986 plants and helps gardeners understand which plants grow well in their areas and which ones they should avoid. The site also has information on birds, insects, landscaping and other garden topics.

The Royal Horticultural Society

While it is based in the UK, this site offers valuable information to gardeners the world over. Topics covered by gardening experts include gardening with children, community gardening, the science of gardening and plant identification and selection.

Extension

Based in the US, this site contains a wealth of information from university faculty and other scholars. The site offers in-depth articles, a section where experts answer reader questions, a resource section and online gardening lessons.

Jamie is a gardening enthusiast who loves to work with client on their backyard facelift project. One of his favourite landscaper in Brisbane is www.premiumpg.com.au. Like most other Aussies, Jamie loves to spend his weekends in the backyard with his beautiful wife, three boys and a golden retriever.






Filed Under: Garden Tips, In The Garden Tagged With: angus stewart, expert gardener, extension, gardening, Gardening tips, gardens online, Global Garden, Kitchen gardeners international, learn, plant database, royal horticultural society, tutorial

More garden safety tips

by Tricia

As with just about anything you do around the home or in the workplace, it’s important to practice gardening safety when you garden. There’d be nothing worse than seriously injuring yourself while you’re gardening and then ending up being unable to maintain your lovely garden.

Health Precautions

Since one aspect of gardening is digging in the earth, possibly working with thorny plants (roses anyone?) and sometimes working with tools that have a little rust on them it’s important to make sure that your Tetanus shots are up to date. Most people only require a Tetanus booster every ten years, but if you are an avid gardener your doctor might recommend that you get booster shots a little more frequently.

You can get some nasty infections from the fungus on rose thorns or the bacteria in your garden soil so if you are working in the garden and end up getting slivers or thorns stuck in your skin try to remove them as soon as you are finished your tasks. Wash the puncture wounds and any other wounds that you acquire while gardening and then apply an antiseptic to prevent infection.

Tool Safety

One major aspect of gardening safety is the safe use of gardening tools. Be sure to store them in an area where children or possibly even pets can’t get at them. When you are using your gardening tools also try to be mindful of where each tool is located, especially if you have friends or family members out in the yard with you. I’m sure everyone can either remember stepping on a rake that was placed on the ground the wrong way and being hit in the face or watching someone else do it.

Perhaps store you smaller gardening tools in a gardening belt or tool belt so they are handy and close to you at all times. A bucket with a handle would also be a great place to store tools as you work in the garden.

Dull gardening tools often make worse cuts (on plants and on our skin!) so make sure your pruners and other cutting tools and blades are sharp and kept free of rust, and handle with care.

Chemical Safety

If you use chemicals in your garden – fertilizers, weed killers or other chemicals please make sure that you are storing them safely and using them as directed. Of course you can make it really easy on yourself and be like me and just not use any chemicals in the garden at all!

Some chemicals are quite toxic when being used and require that a mask and safety clothing be worn when applying them to your plants. Be sure to read the directions before starting to use a chemical in your yard and where appropriate protection if necessary. Also be sure that family members, friends and neighbors or pets aren’t nearby when using potentially toxic chemicals and keep pets and people away until the level of toxicity goes down whether that be an hour or a few days.

Also remember to read the label when it comes to disposing of used chemical bottles or left over chemicals. Sometimes you can simple put the containers in your recycling and other times you might have to drop them off at a special depot.

If you always make sure that you practice garden safety you, your family, pets and friends will be able to enjoy the time in the garden.

Don’t forget to read the first article on Gardening Safety that I published earlier this month in order to avoid injuring yourself while planting new plants in the garden and more.

Filed Under: Garden Maintenance, Garden Tips, Garden Tools, Health, Health and Fitness, Home and Lifestyle, In The Garden Tagged With: bacteria, blades, bucket, chemical, chemical safety, chemical storage, Container, cuts, cutting, digging, digging in soil, earth, fertilize, fertilizer, fungus, garden, Garden Maintenance, garden safety tips, Garden Tips, gardening, gardening safety, Gardening tips, gardening tools, Health, health precautions, In The Garden, infection, keep tools sharp, maintain, new plants, plant, planting, plants, Precautions, protection, protective clothing, pruners, puncture, puncture wounds, recycling, rose, rust, rust free, safety, safety mask, skin, slivers, soil, stuck by thorn, tetanus, tetanus booster, thorns, thorny, tips, tool safety, toxic, toxic chemicals, wash, wound

Gardening tips for you! Part 2

by Tricia

More Organic Gardening Tips (don’t miss Part 1)

26. Mulch! The rain and irrigation water runs off the land, eroding and depleting your unprotected soil.

27. Residential users of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides apply more pounds per acre of these chemicals then farmers do. As these pollutants run off, they harm aquatic life and contaminate the food chain. If you keep your soil healthy, you won’t require chemical fertilizers.

28. Some mulching benefits are protection of roots from the sun’s heat, and protection of plant crowns from winter cold.

29. To prevent diseases and pest infestation , avoid piling mulch against tree trunks. Spread mulch out as far as the drip line.

30. For effective weed control use a layer of coarse mulch 3″ or more in depth. Some hardy grasses may need to be rooted out for successful removal.

31. For a good start, water the ground thoroughly before and after applying a mulch cover.

32. Use plants in your landscape that are either native to your area, or were imported from areas with similar climate and soil. They require a lot less water and care, and won’t die off in the winter.

33. Compost is what happens when leaves, grass clippings, vegetable and fruit scraps, wood chips, straw, and small twigs are combined, then allowed to break down into a soil-like texture. Use it instead of commercial fertilizers.

34. Formal gardens are for you if you love symmetry. They work best around a focal point like a fountain, sculpture, specimen tree, or group of plants.

35. Some flowers, including sweet peas, iris, foxglove, amaryllis, lantana, lupines, clematis, datura, poinsettia, and oleander, are poisonous.

36. When buying annuals or perennials, select plants that are budded but not yet in bloom, so their energy the first two or three weeks in your garden will be directed toward making larger and stronger plants with better-developed root systems.

37. To increase water conservation, look for drought-resistant plants. Usually these plants have silver leaves, deep taproots and small leaves. Succulents are also able to withstand dry weather.

38. When planting, take into consideration the plant’s size at maturity. Layer by height and bloom time for emphasis and constant color.

39. Soaker hoses deliver water directly to the base of the plant, reducing moisture loss from evaporation. Early morning is the best time of day to water.

40. Compost balances both acid and alkaline soils, bringing PH levels into the optimum range for nutrient availability. It contains micro nutrients such as iron and manganese that are often absent in synthetic fertilizers.

41. Avoid frequent, deep cultivation, which can damage plant roots, dry out the soil, disturb healthy soil organisms, and bring weed seeds to the surface where they will germinate.

42. Use the least-disruptive and least-polluting protections against a pest. Try the following methods as applicable: first physical removal, barriers, and traps; next, biological controls; then, appropriate botanical and mineral pesticides.

43. Red, orange, and yellow in your landscape will draw the eye and bring objects closer.To make a small garden feel larger, place warm colors in the front of the space and cool colors in the back.

44. Cover street noise – sound pollution can be minimized by the use of water features, such as a waterfall, or a pond with a fountain jet. Wind chimes also help, as can bird feeders that attract songbirds.

45. Newly planted trees need supplemental water to avoid transplant shock, so water deeply on a weekly basis throughout the growing season.

Browse compost tumblers, reel mowers and garden carts online at Clean Air Gardening.

46. Give order to your garden by defining the boundaries with fences, stone walls, or hedges. Include paths for movement.

47. Less than 2 percent of the insects in the world are harmful. Beneficial insects such as ground beetles, ladybugs, fireflies, green lacewings, praying mantids, spiders, and wasps keep harmful insects from devouring your plants. They also pollinate your plants and decompose organic matter.

48. Plant newly purchased plants during the late evening or on a cloudy day. They have a much better chance of surviving if planted during cloudy, rainy weather than dry, sunny weather.

49. Compost introduces and feeds diverse life in the soil, including bacteria, insects, worms, and more, which support vigorous plant growth.

50. Bright light washes out the cool colors, blue, green, and purple. They are best used in shaded areas for maximum impact.

I’ll post more soon!

Filed Under: Garden Tips, Health, Home and Lifestyle, Organic Tagged With: Garden Tips, Gardening tips, Health, Home and Lifestyle, Organic

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