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biodynamic gardening tips

biodynmic gardening ideas

Finding biodynamic gardening tips like French intensive gardening is becoming quite easy. It doesn’t really matter what your particular reason is for exploring any biodynamic gardening types is Biodynamic hydroponic or biodynamic tomatoes. This very interesting subject is gaining popularity around the globe as a possible answer to the highly industrialized methods of farming that are becoming increasingly more controversial as long-term effects are become undeniable.

The basis for biodynamic gardening is the belief that the land – your back yard, the farm down the road, all land – is a living (dynamic) environment that thrives only when all the flora and fauna (biology) of the area are considered.

Big-business farming has become a monoculture in too many places. There are vast fields that cover miles and miles of farmland where only one crop (corn, for instance) is cultivated. The soil is treated with the synthetic nutrients that only corn needs and with pesticides to rid the fields of pests that feed on corn. Absolutely nothing else is allowed on these farms.

Mother Nature never planted a monocultured forest, savannah, or field of any kind. There is a vast ecosystem of biodiversity in every acre – every inch – of land thriving in its natural environment. All creatures living naturally in such an environment have a role to play in the success of the environment. One feeds off the other and makes food or a more prosperous environment for the next. And on it goes.

Anyone interested in trying such biologically dynamic gardening techniques can easily include one or two steps at a time without much investment of time, trouble, or expense.

Some biodynamic gardening tips to begin with are as simple as saving fruit and vegetable scraps when cooking dinner or buying a container of earthworms from your local garden center. Or planting allysum and a few marigolds.

The scraps of raw plant matter from last night’s dinner can be added to a compost heap if you’ve got one started. If not, you can bury them in the flower bed alongside whatever is already planted there.

All you have to do with the earthworms is empty the container somewhere, anywhere, in the garden. They will find their way to the organic matter in your garden (the scraps of raw plant matter from last night’s dinner) and work their magic on your soil.

These busy earthworms will aerate the soil as they burrow through it, allowing precious oxygen and water to reach the roots of your lovingly planted flowers and shrubs. Heavy, compacted soils will become lighter as a result, allowing more room for delicate roots to grow, strengthening the entire plant. The worms will also leave nutrient-rich castings behind (their waste matter) that will revitalize the soil like no synthetic fertilizer can ever do.

Every garden has bugs and some of these bugs are highly desirable for the health of your garden. Some of them even eat the bad bugs so no poisons are needed.

Plant allysum around your garden to attract lacewings, delicate fly-like creatures that love eating aphids, which love sucking the life out of your favorite plants. And allysum fills the night air with a delicate perfume as it lights the garden with its golden yellow flowers in the spring.

Most bugs just hate marigolds so scatter these highly beneficial plants around your biodynamic garden and most of the nastiest critters will just stay away.

These simple biodynamic gardening tips won’t change industrial agriculture or save the planet overnight but they may pique your interest enough to lead to further exploration. And many happy gardeners think saving Mother Earth one garden plot at a time is a giant step in a healing direction.

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