As the Garden Grows

What's blooming today?

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Archives
  • Links
  • About
  • Join GTS Meme
  • Guest Blogger
  • Contact

You are here: Home / Archives for healthy plants

Three Ways to Keep Your Organic Vegetable Garden Pest-Free

by Trish

One of the most frustrating problems that organic vegetable gardens have is pests. Organic vegetable gardens are more prone to pest infestation simply because chemicals and pesticides are not used in controlling their population. Without artificial pest control products, controlling pest infestation is going to be much harder. Not only is it going to be very time consuming, but it’s going to be very back-breaking as well. However, it can be done. You can control pest population through organic and natural means.

Choose New Plants Carefully

If you’re going to buy new plants from a nursery, you have to check it thoroughly first before making any purchase and bringing them home. You don’t want to introduce pests into your garden, and you most definitely don’t want to introduce sickly and diseased plants. Yes, they may look healthy at first glance, but if you don’t know what to look out for, then you might end up with a pest-infested organic vegetable garden. The new plants might also infect your healthy crops.

For this reason, examine the plants at the nursery carefully before purchasing them. Look at the leaves and make sure there are no dead spots. See to it, too, that the stems are not rotted and that they’re not carrying any insects.

In addition to these, it will also be very beneficial for you if you examine their roots thoroughly. See to it that they look firm and healthy. White roots usually mean healthy plants; while dark and spongy roots mean unhealthy plants.

Encourage the Growth of Natural Predators

Chemical pest control products can eliminate pests in the garden. They can quickly and easily get rid of pestiferous insects that do significant damage to plants; however, they can also get rid of beneficial insects. Now, these beneficial insects and other animals are the natural predators of pests. They feed on them, control their population, and help keep them out of your vegetable garden. Since chemicals can also kill the natural predators, then what’s stopping pests from invading your garden again once the chemicals wear off?

If you don’t want to leave your organic vegetable garden defenseless, then encourage the growth of these natural predators. Don’t get rid of the bushes. Instead, only give them a good trimming once in a while so they can still provide home to natural predators. The same should also be done to trees. Trees provide homes to birds, which are also natural predators of pests.

Use Natural Pest Repellant Products

You can also repel pests by making use of natural and organic pest repellant sprays. You can make these homemade sprays by combining water and ingredients found in your kitchen. For example, oil and garlic spray works very well to kill aphids as well as cabbage moths. It can also get rid of mildew fungi. Alcohol and oil spray can also kill a number of pestiferous insects, and you can make this by mixing isopropyl alcohol, vegetable oil, and water.

There are so many recipes for homemade sprays that you can find online. But if the pest infestation of your organic vegetable garden is severe, then hiring a pest control company that offers green solutions is a very good idea.

Attached Images:
  •  License: MBG Stock Image by Smart Photo Stock

Jennifer Dallman writes for a Peoria pest control company. Through this article, she hopes to teach readers how to care for their organic vegetable garden properly.






Filed Under: In The Garden, Organic, pests Tagged With: control, healthy plants, infestations, natural predators, new plants, organic garden, organic vegetables, pest free, pest repellant

Thin leafed poor blooming azaleas?

by Tricia

How did your Azaleas, and Rhododendrons do this year? Did they bloom well? Is the foliage lush and full?

If you azaleas didn’t seem to do as well this year as they have in the past, or if the leaf coverage is rather thin you might want to be proactive and take some measure to help them get healthy so they’ll bloom well next season.

Apply azalea fertilizer in the spring. You might want to give your plants one light dose before they begin to bloom, perhaps just as they come out of dormancy, and another dose shortly after they’ve finished blooming. Fertilizing will encourage better growth and the plant should get fuller looking.

Lightly pruning blooming branches and bringing the flowers indoors or lightly prune immediately after the blooming season ends.

You’ll be cutting off some of the new growth, but when pruning takes place near the beginning of the season it actually encourages new growth. By pruning, fertilizing and watering regularly throughout the season your azaleas should be stronger the following year.

You might even want to thin some of the older branches after the blooms fade in order to shape the tree for the following year. It make take a few years to prune your azalea into a nice shape that shows off it’s fullness as you do not want to prune too much off at once.

Filed Under: Garden Tips, Perennials, Plant health, Spring Tasks, Trees and Shrubs Tagged With: Azaleas, bloom, cutting, dormancy, fertilize, fertilizer, flower, foliage, grow, growth, Health, healthy plants, leaves, new growth, problems, prune, pruning, spring, watering

Stinking brew! Alfalfa Tea

by Tricia

Oh my. I did something this evening that I have to do under the cover of darkness. No, I’m not doing something illegal or trying to hide some big gardening secret from my neighbors.

No, nothing quite as simple as that I’m afraid.

You see, I’m quite sure that my neighbors are well aware that something is going on when I do my sneaky deed.

It’s the smell that gives it away.

Remember sometime near the beginning of July I posted that I was going to brew a batch of Alfalfa tea? Yup, well I did. It brewed and fermented, and I stirred it and tended to it and the herbal grow juice was more than ready to be poured onto my garden beds.

I used two large garbage bins. Added 6 cups of alfalfa pellets to each bin and filled them to within 4 inches of the top. Then I added 1.5 cups of Epsom salt to each container as well. The alfalfa contains a natural growth hormone that the plants respond to very quickly, plus the alfalfa gives them a nitrogen boost too. The epsom salts add some magnesium to the mix. Just for good measure I also added some Iron Green. Read the directions on the bottle to figure out how many capfuls of iron Green to add per litre or gallon of water. I followed the directions but I can’t remember how much I added at this time.

When I was done preparing the mixture I gave it a good stir with a big stick and then put the lids on the containers. I stirred it two or three times a day for most of the last three weeks. It was ready after about one week but we were going through a heat wave here so I wasn’t ready to use it.

Oh, I also added about a cup of molasses to each container on the third day. This feeds the bacteria that is developing and aids in the fermentation process.

It’s very important to stir the mixture at least once a day to add some air into the fluid that brewing away in your driveway, or backyard. If you don’t it will smell even worse when you decide to use it.

But I digress. I stopped to tell you my recipe for alfalfa tea in case you want to try it on your own garden. You might not, by the time I finish my story, but let me testify that it works. No matter how bad it might smell you will get results and you’ll get them very quickly. Honest, I wouldn’t lie to you.

I guess, to my neighbors, this might seem like a big garden secret because I only pour the stuff on my garden late at night when most people are inside their homes. Then they see that my garden is lush and full of new growth on all the plants and that I have lovely blooms on all of my flowering plants.

But I don’t pour it on the garden at night because it’s a secret. No, I’d gladly share my recipes with them. No I do it because it smells terrible. Like a cross between poop and vomit. Really disgusting. Well, this batch was anyways since I’d let it go to long thanks to the heat wave.

I’m sure anyone around can smell it for several blocks.

My husband helped me. He pre-watered the garden beds so the alfalfa tea wouldn’t just roll off the mulch when I poured it around the plants. I, of course, had the nasty job of filling watering containers with the nasty brew splashing myself in the process as I walked back and forth from the flower beds to the brewing containers.

Whenever a bus would go by and stop at the corner we’d try to hide ourselves in case someone walked in the direction of our home. If we saw someone walking down the street and knew they would pass our house we’d stay out of sight then too. The job is so nasty that you just want to get it over with and you don’t want to stop and talk to neighbors inquiring about the awful smell.

Chris went over the areas that I had applied the alfalfa tea to and did a normal watering of the area. This helps soak the alfalfa tea into the ground and, well, it cuts the smell down a lot too.We had to shower when we came in to get the smell off of us, but I think my hands still smell.

I wouldn’t do this if the results were nil to mild. Uh huh, it wouldn’t be worth it. The results are spectacular! I started using alfalfa tea last year. I think the garden got at least four doses of the stinking brew. Within days of each application new growth could be seen on most of the plants. The roses would start to grow basal canes, and other plants would start to push out flower buds.

You’ve seen pictures of my garden on this site, and if you’ve been cruising around you’ve also seen my plants on Tricia’s Musings and Breath of Life, that should be proof that it works and that my garden is healthy. I don’t use any chemicals in my garden. Everything is natural.

If you are daring, and you’d like a lovely garden, take my advice and make some alfalfa tea. It stinks but it works. You’ll love it. Oh yes, you might want to apply it to your garden when your neighbors aren’t around just as I do, otherwise I’m sure those around you will have something to say about it.

More information on alfalfa tea:

Fertilizing roses – Alfalfa Tea

What are the Benefits of Aerated Compost Teas vs. Classic Teas?

Enjoy!

Filed Under: Garden Maintenance, Garden Tips, Home and Lifestyle, Organic, Plant health, The neighborhood Tagged With: aeration, alfafa growth hormone, alfalfa pellets, Alfalfa tea, brew, compost recipe, epsom salt, fast, fermented, flowering plants, garbage bins, garden beds, Garden Tips, grow, growth, healthy plants, Home and Lifestyle, molasses, new growth, Organic, organic fertilizer, Plant health, recipe, smell, smells terrible, stink, stir, water


Subscribe


Never miss a post
Subscribe to our RSS feed!
It's FREE! rss feed

Free Newsletter

As the Garden Grows
by Email - FREE!



Follow me on Twitter!

Suggested Sites

Eavestrough Cleaning Toronto

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Top Three Tips For Choosing The Right Patio Furniture For Your Home
  • The 4 Things To Know About Perennial Garden Design
  • Painful Plants: Five Houseplants That Can Cause Injury
  • An Outbreak Shouldn’t Mean A Break Out: 3 Insect Repellants Gentle Enough For Your Skin
  • 5 Ideas To Make Your Garden POP
  • 6 Simple Ways To Make Your Home Eco-Friendly
  • How To Redesign Your Garden To Make It Safe For Your Children
  • Starting A Career As A Professional Gardener
  • 6 Time Saving Tips For Gardening
  • Top Tips On Redesigning Your Garden For The Summer

What they’re Saying

  • Rodhe Stevens on Landscaping Tips On A Limited Budget
  • Edmund Wells on Benefits of using mulch on the garden
  • Surjith on An Outbreak Shouldn’t Mean A Break Out: 3 Insect Repellants Gentle Enough For Your Skin
  • Pamela on The 4 Things To Know About Perennial Garden Design
  • dog on The quality of your pet food is important

Pages

  • About
  • Archives
  • Become a Guest Blogger For As the Garden Grows
  • Blog
  • Categories
  • Contact
  • Disclosure
  • Do Follow Bloggers Blogroll
  • Green Thumb Sunday
  • I am Canadian Blogroll
  • Join GTS Meme
  • Links
  • Privacy Policy
  • Q & A
  • Toronto Bloggers Blogroll
  • What’s Growing

Search

My Garden

Member of
Garden Voices

Tags

backyard Beautiful bloom blooming blooms Bulbs cold Entertainment and Rec flower flowers garden garden bed garden beds gardener gardening green Green Thumb Green Thumb Sunday grow growing GTS home Home and Lifestyle House In The Garden leaves my garden photo photos plant plants purchase rain rose roses Shopping snow spring summer Toronto water weather winter Wordless Wednesday WW

Site Ratings


Visitors since 2006


Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Connect with me

  • Facebook
  • Google Plus
  • Pintrest
  • Twitter
  • RSS

Copyright © 2026 · News Child Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in