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When you first decide that you are going to use your back garden for growing vegetables you may feel a sense of slight panic about how you are going to plan, what seeds you want to plant and how, if you can, succeed at vegetable gardening. Let me put your fears at rest because if [...]
Growing vegetables in containers can be simple when you know how! Now, growing vegetables in containers is also known as mini gardening which is perfect for introducing children into the fun world of gardening. It is also perfect if you are not blessed with a large garden plot as containers are small enough to be [...]
We are looking for new idea, please let us know if you have any new idea’s you’d like to share

Spring
Your spring vegetable garden has an array of possibilities that you can plant and keep busy at within your garden during these early sometimes wet months of the year. The weather is cooler than that of the summer months but is considerably warmer than the winter you have just emerged from. Peas are a perfect vegetable to start planting and getting ready, as well as leafy vegetables like lettuce, perennial vegetables such as rhubarb and asparagus and beets, mustard, onions, radishes and spinach. Asparagus for example is one of a few vegetables that you can plant once and then see return year after year without the need for you to plant over and over again. Most people when they think of spring they think of lambs, snowdrops and of course these delicious vegetables which taste completely different when hand picked from your garden rather than bought from the store.
Summer
The summer vegetable garden is where the fun really starts! This is when the possibilities are really opened up for you. Now if you live somewhere where the heat really turns up during the summer months then there is no need to despair as there are still vegetables that you can grow that can withstand the hottest weather and grow in abundance; Okra for example as well as black eyed, purple hull peas and butter beans! You may find that during the summer months you may have problems with various insects that attack your garden so make sure you take precautions to combat these pests before you end up with a mass infestation that can devastate your vegetables making them a failed crop. Try not to use pesticides as this will taint the taste, try keeping things organic for the fullest flavors. Other summer vegetables that can be grown in more reasonable summer climates include; Tomatoes, peppers, beans and courgettes as well as cucumbers. Always remember to water your plants regularly as well as weed them. The summer vegetable garden should always be harvested every two to three days to make sure you get all of the ripe fruits of your labor as they become mature enough to eat!
Some people perceive that vegetable gardening can only be accomplished in the outdoors, in a garden but what if I could tell you that you can no matter where you live have a vegetable garden? You probably think I am mad but the current trend for indoor vegetable gardens has become a world craze that has followers within the Hollywood A-list! There are of course a few vegetables that cannot be grown indoors but they are mainly sweet corn, pumpkins and squash where as pretty much any types of root and leafy vegetables can be grown along with tomatoes.
How to start indoor vegetable gardening could never be so easy with the supplies that are available on today’s markets! So let’s have a look at what you will need and the things that you need to consider. The main things you need to think about is the temperature, light and how pollination is going to occur. Now one of the main things people forget is that vegetable seeds seem to be in short supply in your local stores during the colder months of the year so make sure you stock up early in the warmer months those vegetables you want to grow indoors during the winter. It is also best to start your indoor vegetable garden around the fall time as the heat is not too much and the cold not too cold – perfect! Now depending on what vegetables you want to grow will depend on where indoors you can grow them. Certain vegetables can withstand cooler indoor temperatures where as others need more warmth. Leaf and root vegetable crops are often the ones that can take a more wide range of heats where as tomatoes, peppers and beans need warmer places to grow.
When it comes to light you need to make sure that your indoor garden has plenty of sunlight, six to eight hours is best to ensure the plants survival. If you find that by being near the window means that the plants are getting too cold then you may need to buy lights to help compensate whilst keeping them away from the cold. The best tubes to use for this are a combination of white cool and warm tubes to replicate the suns rays.

I am often asked which guide is the best for teaching on planting a vegetable garden for beginners and I have to say that there are several on the market that certainly warrant attention for all budding gardening beginners. Recently a friend of mine showed me a copy of a new guide that had caught her attention and only after reading a few pages I was hooked.
Vegetable Gardening 101 – Save money growing your own vegetables, is an amazing, precise, straight to the point read that tell you in terms that you can understand (not like the jargon some guides use). The writer begins by telling you about how she started off a corporate working girl with a determination to find ways of saving money due to the recession. We are all in this recession and her words of encouragement and advice really do fit into your life with ease regardless of weather you have acres of garden space or a patio in which to create your vegetable garden; anything is possible. Most people find that it is when they get to the actual planting they panic and find it hard to know just what vegetables are the right one for them to plant. Vegetable Gardening 101 teaches you weather you are a beginner or weather you’re more advanced just how to cultivate any size space into a wonderful, functioning vegetable garden that will save you money on your grocery bills each month. Depending on the season you can plant just about anything regardless of the amount of space that you have.
Finding the right book to guide you can be hard to find, especially one that is so down to earth and after reading Vegetable Gardening 101 I can recommend that this guide is the right one for those of you that want to save money, help the environment, want tips and even advice on where to begin when it comes to creating the right vegetable garden for you!!! Planting doesn’t have to be hard as some people make it out to be (you know who you are!!), so make your life easy and even if you are a beginner you can eat fresh delicious produce right from your own garden.
You can find this guide here.
Starting your own vegetable garden is a brilliant way to save your pocket money and do your bit for the environment in one go. It is also a wonderful way to keep the kids entertained, involved and part of something from start to finish. It will give them more respect about where food comes from as they see from a handful and even in some cases a single seed can grow into a fully fledged vegetable that adorns their dinner plate. Food that is grown by yourself always seems to taste so much better than any other type of organically grown produce! Not all home grown vegetables look exactly like you see them in your local store and are often misshapen to a degree but don’t worry this is completely normal and they taste exactly the same if not better than the store bought ones! Sometimes they do come out looking exactly like the store bought ones but who cares you have grown it and the sense of accomplishment you feel is better than any other feeling!
There is not as much to do as you think when you starting vegetable gardens; turning up the soil and making compost, planting the seeds, watering and then just sit back and watch your work grow!!!!
Making your own compost is so easy even your children can do it alone. All you have to do is dig a shallow hole, place all of your kitchen scraps, newspapers and garden debris into it and then place the soil back over again. Leave for about a week and you will find that you will have perfect compost! Use this compost to really give your soil a good boost of vitamins and conditioning before you plant. There is a golden rule that states you should do this and then leave the soil alone for a week or two before you plant your seeds as it does take time for everything to really get into the soil.
After planting make sure that you keep your vegetable garden weeded and watered. Let Mother Nature do the rest. Some people say that starting vegetable gardens are hard and complicated but why make it harder than it is? It’s easy peasy really!!

The raised bed vegetable garden is the garden that saves your back when it comes to caring for your vegetable, herbs and flowers. They can come in many shapes and sizes all depending on the amount of prime space you have available at your disposal. There are many different ways of using raised bed gardening that actually work! There are many different ways that people argue over that are supposed to be better than the other:
One of the most favored methods that people agree upon as being the best way to give your raised bed gardening, a boost is the organic way. By using all of your old kitchen leftovers that are biodegradable, old newspapers that have been watered and mashed up, your newly cut grass ends and raked up leaves from the garden you can create compost that is amazing for your raised beds. Some people argue that adding the juice and zest of a lemon is also important where as others think it is not. It’s totally up to you that one! Place these things together between lavish amounts of store bought compose and your seedling to create the ideal environment for growing.
Another way that is constantly spoken about is the ideal way to grow vegetables within the family of pumpkins. If you have a corner that is spare then brush all of your leaves into that corner, your degradable rubbish, weeds, and other back yard unwanted mess. Add a few hand full’s of store bought or your own mix compost and plant your seeds. The effect is amazing! You will see in no time that your vegetables will really take off and even better you will see the pile disappear before your eyes!! So make sure that you keep feeding the pile.
The other way to make sure that your raised bed vegetable garden gets a real kick start is to get hold of some scraps of old unused natural carpet. Then use this in place of the newspaper or cardboard that you would normally use. The roots of the vegetables, herbs or flowers that you are growing find the weaving easier to adhere to and are successfully kept moist and watered by the carpet fibers that retain the moisture each time you water better than newspaper or cardboard ever would.
Added on 27 July 2009