User:PenlandSutherland587

How To Arrange A Backyard Garden And Get It Prepared To Plant

When you decide that you want a garden, your primary choice is to decide on the right spot. You may be restricted to having a small container garden if space is at a premium. Finding the best garden spot is determined by the amount of sunlight the area receives, with the best option being exposure from the south. Steer clear of placing your garden where it would receive exposure from the north unless it is your only option because this  will severely hamper a success of your garden.

Using the southern site, where the sun sits warm all day, you need to run the rows of vegetables north and south. In this way, the east aspect of the vegetation receives sun in the morning and the west side receives it in the afternoon. Having an arrangement such as this, you shouldn't have any lopsided  plants. Alternately, if your garden is situated facing the southeast, it is best to place the rows in a northwest and southwest direction so they will receive optimal sunlight.

If at all possible, the sunlight should be uniformly dispersed for the maximum  available time. Most likely, you have noticed a lopsided window plant, which serves as a good illustration of what happens when  sunlight is unequally distributed. When you know the place you will place your garden, sketch out a drawing of where you want each plant to go. When you start your garden the ground will most likely be, either covered with  rubbish or with sod. If you work with a sizable area then you should turn the sod under, after plowing the ground, but if it is a small area, simply remove the sod.

You can place the sod in one location where it can compost into fertilizer. During the summer of you can add green vegetable debris to your  compost pile, and in the fall you can add your piles of raked leaves. This compost can all be used as fertilizer for the following year. Your garden spot must be plowed under sufficiently so there  aren't any large clumps. Seeds are not going to grow correctly unless the ground consists of small particles. You will get your garden ready to go having a spade, a hoe, and a rake.

Although the spade is going to do a good job of turning the ground, you won't be able to eliminate all of the clumps. Utilizing the hoe can break up any excess clumps and get rid of the weeds. Using the spade can be full on, hard work, but using a hoe and a rake won't be that vigorous. After you have completed working with the hoe, take the rake and smooth out the garden  foundation. Finally it is time for you to plant the seeds.

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