Why Go Green Natural Gardening II for (compost recycling) Us and our kids and for the Love of Nature in a Green Garden Village.
No commentsBy Kismatrosz Hun
Crops, rich in yield by mixed cultures.
As a gardener with a natural gardens in a green garden village, you should make yourselves familiar with the cultivation of the plants in mixed cultures.
Also in the nature plants always grow free in a community, they help and balance each other.
You can do similar experiences if you cultivate numerous vegetable kinds and separate herbs in a patch of the natural gardening.
Causes for pests and illnesses can be eliminated by favorable combination as well as yield and quality substantially can be increased.
Mixed cultures take into consideration the separate nutrient requests and the enlargement behavior of the plants.
The plant distances must be select with the mixed culture in such a way that each kind receives the needed place.
The rows grow all together in summer so close that the ground remains out of the sun, humid and to a great amount without weed.
At the beginning you are better off if you copy experienced neighborhoods (see the following list), then presently you can experiment yourselves.
They should not forget spices and herbs in the mixed culture. With their intensive smells herbs can considerably preclude the pest infestation in the vegetable garden.
Thus protect for instance Savory before lice infestation in beans. Marigolds and nasturtium, rue and French marigold help to repulse insects. Mustard, sage and thyme chase away snails.
Vegetable kinds and mixing cultivation for natural gardening in a green garden village.
Beans
good with:
Dills, cucumbers, kohlrabi, lettuce, radish, rhubarb, spinach
Critically with:
Peas, fennel, leek, onions
Savory
helpful with:
Beetroot, lettuce, bush and poles beans
Dill
good with:
Potatoes, cucumbers, bush beans, peas, cabbage kinds, turnips
Endives
good with:
Pole beans, leek, turnips, cabbage kinds
Peas
encouraging with:
Lettuce, kohlrabi, turnips, radish, cabbage kinds
Harshly with:
Onions, bush and poles beans
Strawberries
helpful with:
Beans, garlic, kohlrabi, lettuce, leek, radishes, radish, spinach, onions
Unfavorably with:
Cabbage kinds
Fennel
good with:
Lettuce
Critically with:
Bush beans, peas
Borecole
constructive with:
Bush beans, peas, radish, celery , cucumbers, kohlrabi
Adversely with:
Potatoes, leek, onions,
Cucumbers
good with:
Bush beans, cabbage kinds, lettuce, parsley, beetroot, celeryceleriac, onions
Unfavorably with:
Strawberries, radish, tomatoes
Nasturtium
favorable with:
Potatoes, radishes, radish, courgette, tomatoes
Carrots, turnips
constructive with:
Dill, strawberries, peas, lettuce, radishes, spinach, onions, tomatoes
Potatoes
helpful with:
Bush beans, kohlrabi, spinach
Harshly with:
Peas, cabbage kinds, beetroot, pumpkin, celery , tomatoes, sunflowers
Garlic
encouraging with:
Strawberries, cucumbers, potatoes, carrots, beetroot, tomatoes
Adversely with:
Beans, peas, cabbage kinds
Kohlrabi
favorable with:
Peas, cucumbers, radish, potatoes
Critically with:
Leek
Lettuce
helpful with:
Bush beans, peas, cucumbers, turnips, onions, tomatoes, beans, rhubarb
Adversely with:
Parsley
Parsley
favorable with:
Erdbeeren,Rettich,Zwiebeln,Tomaten,Gurken
Unfavorably with:
Lettuce
Leek
encouraging with:
Celery , tomatoes, strawberries
Unfavorably with:
Beans, peas, cabbage kinds, saladlettuce, kohlrabi, beetroot
Radishes
good with:
Buschbohnen,Erbsen,Erdbeeren,Tomaten,Zwiebeln,Petersilie
Adversely with:
Cucumbers
Radish
encouraging with:
Bush and poles beans, peas, strawberries, spinach, beetroot, cabbage kinds, lettuce, tomatoes, kohlrabi
Critically with:
Cucumbers
Brussels sprouts
helpful with:
Bush beans, cucumbers, peas, kohlrabi, radish, celeryceleriac
Harshly with:
Potatoes, leek, onions
Beetroot
constructive with:
Bush beans, strawberries, cucumbers, kohlrabi, radish
Unfavorably with:
Potatoes, leek, spinach, turnips
Red, White
encouraging with:
Bush beans, peas, cucumbers,
Unfavorably with:
Potatoes, leek, onions,
Savoy cabbage
encouraging with:
Radish, kohlrabi
Critically with:
Strawberries
Chives
favorable with:
Dill
Critically with:
Bush and pole beans, peas, cabbage kinds, beetroot
Celery
good with:
Bush and pole beans, cucumbers, cabbage kinds, leek, turnips, tomatoes
Critically with:
Potatoes, lettuce
Spinach
encouraging with:
Potatoes, cabbage kinds, turnips, radish, leek, rhubarb, pole beans
Critically with:
Beetroot
Tomatoes
good with:
Bush beans, cabbage kinds, lettuce, kohlrabi, turnips, radish, spinach, onions
Unfavorably with:
Fennel, potatoes, peas, cucumbers
Courgette
encouraging with:
Peas, nasturtium, onions
Onions
encouraging with:
Parsley, beetroot, tomatoes
Critically with:
Bush and pole beans, peas, cabbage kinds
In the natural gardens of the gardener Gertrud Franck/Germany there are no walk ways and patch separations.
She sows in the early spring in the whole garden, a row distance of 50 cm, spinach. In stuck between there grow the other cultures.
The spinach serves as food and also as a pest protection, shadow, ground cover and as a compost. With this cultivation method the garden has an everlasting change of planting and harvest and delivers even in winter fresh vegetables.
The work with walk ways as well as keeping clean is eradicated , the garden is not dug up, is loosened only with a grave fork. By surface composting even the compost heap becomes superfluous.
This is an exciting method for the green garden village owner who wants to work less.
There is no rule which is valid for each natural gardening. Climate and wind relations, ground state, the position of the garden and everything else must be taken into consideration.
The best way to know, what grows best where, is to try it out.
To the natural gardener should be directed by the sunrise and sunset, harvest and planting dates as well as the lunar stand. All these observations will reveal a physical connection and will also give you a lot of joy.
Read more in the next article for natural gardening in a green garden village
.
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Give a Home brewing Kit this Holiday Season
By Garland Drake
Are you always searching for a special gift for that person who seems to have everything? I would bet that they don’t have a home brewing system of their own! If you can give the gift of creating something to someone, a home brewing kit is going to be something that will be laughed about and used for weeks and months to come. Your friend might even stumble upon a fantastic method for make beer that all of you love.
Holidays, birthdays and special occasions are all a great time to give the gift of a home brewing system to make beer. Most every one just loves to have a great time, enjoy a beer, and sit back and relax. The hobby beer maker is one who can make the beer dark, heavy, light, sweet or sour. The gift you are giving to a person, with the gift of a home brewing system is one that will create a new hobby for that person. Hobbies are how we pass the time in life, and enjoy our time. Giving someone this new hobby is not only going to give them a hobby, but something new in life to talk about with others at the same time!
For the holidays (or for those birthdays, special occasions and even retirement parties), you most likely know someone who has everything they need or want. Yet, you still need to find that perfect gift that is going to be personal and useful at the same time. A home brewing kit is going to be the answer. It is going to show that you know that person likes beer (or wine as there are wine making kits too!) and you are giving the person something they can share with others who visit their home.
What types of special equipment are needed for home brewing?
No special equipment is needed. The home brewing kit is going to give you all the information, and ingredients you need to get started on making a batch of beer. The home brewing kit is even going to give you information about how to make larger batches, and what types of household things you can use to do this. You will find that if you are purchasing a gift of a home brewing kit for someone, you might even want to purchase one for yourself and get in on all the fun that is to be had. You can make brews at home; share with your family and friends, and all while enjoying your time by the fireplace in the summer or in the winter!
Making your own beer is easy. There are no hard to find ingredients, and you don’t have to wait long for the final product either. The beer you make is fun, easy and good tasting all at the same time! As you enjoy making beer, and find that special flavor you want to re create all the time, you could even bottle and give others your own beer as a gift when you head to their home for a party or get together.
Learn about storing potatoes, types of peppers and other information at the Gardening Central site.
Labels for Your Home Brew
By Garland Drake
Making your own beer is a hobby that is growing fast around the world. If you really want to know what is being put into the beer that you drink, making your own beer is going to give you all that information and so much more. There are no harsh chemicals needed to make beer, and all the natural ingredients are going to be easy for you to purchase online and offline to make your own beer. You can find any basic beer-making recipe, and then make changes to the process to change the overall final flavor and taste of the beer you make.
After a few ‘tries’ at making your own beer, you are going to create a beer flavor that you can really enjoy. We each have our own personal favorites, and as you manipulate the recipes, you can create a beer that is just right for you. You can even control the alcohol content in the beer, by determining the amount of time you leave the beer to ferment and to ‘become’ beer after you have added the yeast to the mixture. Beer making is fun, and it is not difficult at all.
To start in the hobby of beer making, it is suggested that you purchase a beer making kit. As you purchase the kit first, you will learn how all the pros make beer. You will learn more tips and tricks for making beer so that the beer you make is going to be better overall from the start.
While you make beer, you may find that you like one type so much that you want to start making your own beer all the time. This is going to leave you with a problem that you need to label your beer. You want to know what date you made the beer and even what type of beer you made. The labels you purchase for your beer cans, beer containers or even for the barrels you use to make beer are going to be vital to your ongoing hobby.
Labels that you use on mailing letters that have a sticky back are going to be great for making those first batches of beer. As you continue making your own beer, you will find paper labels are going to work better, as you start putting your beer in bottles and actually having them capped or stopped. Putting the labels on the beer bottles or containers before putting the beer in, and before you put them in storage is going to help you remember which beer you want to drink first.
Home brewing is something that is found all over the world. From the far corners of the nation many are starting to make their own beer for many reasons. We are including these reasons here for your own use, so you can determine for yourself if making beer is something you want to try your hand at!
In making your own beer, you become master of your own home. You create the drink that your family and friends love, and will enjoy as they sip that cold beer from a frosty mug. Being able to master this talent is something that will take a little patience, and determination as you continue making batches of beer as your friends continually drink it every time they come over to your home!
Information on cordyline plant can be found at the Gardening Central site.
Thursday, October 29th, 2009 at 3:10 am and is filed under gardening. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.










