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by Sharon Price, Sha

If you have always liked buying organic produce at your local supermarket you may have considered growing your own organic garden. Learning how to grow an organic garden is actually quite easy. The most important thing to remember is that the products you use must be free form chemicals and pesticides.

Steps You Should Take When Growing A Organic Garden:

1. The First thing you should do is test your soil. The test will tell you how healthy your soil is. If you test different parts of your garden you will be able to decide the best place for growing a organic garden. The soil should be sent to a lab who will conduct the tests and provide you with accurate results. You will then be able to make any adjustments necessary to ensure you have perfect soil for growing a organic garden.

2. The next step in growing a organic garden is the seeds. There are several outlets for gardeners to find the exact seeds they are looking for. The type of garden you choose to plant is entirely up to you.

3. Once you have chosen your seeds, you need to weed the area where you will be growing a organic garden. The weeding makes sure that the soil is kept at its best.

4. Planting the seeds, followed by watering is the next steps. Soil should be watered regularly; however it should never be over watered. Over watering will wash away all the nutrients you have been trying so hard to accumulate in the soil and ruin your hard work in growing a organic garden.

5. Fertilizing is also an important step when you are growing a organic garden.. Garden centers have fertilizer for purchase or you could mix your own fertilizer with products from your home. The best times to fertilize are in the spring, and then again during summertime. This will ensure that your organ garden will achieve the desired results you are trying to achieve.

Learning how to grow an organic garden is easy, with a few tips your garden will blossom in no time. Deciding on what you will plant is a different story. Some choose to learn how to grow an organic rose garden, while others may choose to grow herbs or vegetables. Using seed guides, you can determine what items would grow better in your region. You will learn from experience too as trial and effort in growing a organic garden will show in the results that you achieve. You will find what works and what doesn't and you should have fun learning too.


Espaliering can help you do this by creating a tree in a two-dimensional plane.

Don't let a small garden deter you from realizing your dream of growing fresh fruit from your own tree. This technique of growing trees has been popular in Europe since the Middle Ages and may even have been used in ancient Egypt. Visitors traveling through many European countries have very often thought they were looking at grape vines, which were in fact apple or pear trees or almost any other type of fruit tree you could mention.

Espaliering (es-pal-yer-ing) allows you to produce fruit trees against a wall or fence without interfering with open space; you can train your tree on a trellis or build a structute to form a hedge. You can successfully grow several fruit trees in a very limited space using this method yet you will find that the fruit is barely compromised.

Visit your local garden and centre research what fruit is OK with your local climatic conditions. Some varieties of apple, for example Granny Smith, Jonathan, and Rome Beauty are tip bearing fruit and should be avoided as it's much more difficult to keep these fruiting. Also, avoid fruit trees on standard rootstocks.

It is preferable to start your initiation into this form of producing fruit by using dwarf rootstock. Apples and pears are the best trees to start with as they both bear fruit for about twenty years (that's a great investment). Most importantly, their branches are flexible which allows you to bend and shape them.

The ground preparation and aftercare of the espalier is the same as for the free standing tree to maintain its growth and health. The pruning and shaping of this type of tree are no more time consuming than the standard type of tree. As a matter of fact, because you can reach and see what you're doing, pruning and harvesting are a lot easier.

If you are going to train your trees against a fence or wall set the plants about 8 inches from the wall to encourage air circulation, but first you need to create support for the trees to be trained on. The simplest method is the horizontal method of espaliering but, as you get more involved, only your imagination can restrict the way you train your fruit trees.

What you are trying to do is train your fruit trees to grow horizontally like the way grape vines are grown on wood, wire or metal. To grow against a wall or fence use eye screws securely set in horizontal lines. The first horizontal wire should be 15 inches above ground level, then space the others 14-18 inches apart to a height of about 6 feet, or whatever height you're comfortable with, and thread these with 14 gauge galvanized wire.

Alternatively, if you want a free standing fruit hedge, build a wooden frame or stretch 14 gauge wire fixed between 4x4 posts about 15 foot apart, with the wires running horizontally 14- 18 inches apart. You can make the structure to suit your own specifications.

You are now ready to collect and plant your fruit trees, the ideal being a one year old which has been grafted onto dwarf stock; these are referred to as "whips" as they have no branches at this early stage. Choose wintertime to start off your fruit trees when the plant is dormant.

Plant the trees about 15 feet apart and about 8 inches from the wall, and then you need find a bud about 18 inches from ground level and cut off the wood above it.

Come spring time allow 3 buds only to develop, the top one is left to establish itself vertically as the main trunk, choose a pair of buds opposite each other to form the bottom limbs, and as they develop, train the shoots by gently bending the young shoots to grow horizontally along the bottom wire using ties to hold them to the desired shape. Tie the branches into place as soon as possible as it is much easier to work with supple shoots than older woodier branches.

Follow this example annually till you've reached the height you want and then prune off the trunk flush with the top tier of side branches. Now the tree is established, keep the desired shape and make sure forward or backward shoots are removed or any branches that do not fit into the pattern.

A typical espalier will be 6-8ft tall with 3-4 sets of horizontal branches and it will usually take between 5-7 years to create this structure and start harvesting fruit.

As you become accomplished in the art of espaliering, you might want to add to your fruit collection. Apricots, Plums, Cherry trees all respond well to this type of pruning; but as their branches are not so flexible they are usually trained into different patterns.
Article Source : Organic Gardening Tips

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Both Sharon Price & Colin D Price are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Sharon Price has sinced written about articles on various topics from Crohns Disease, Entertainment Guide and Crohns Disease. . Sharon Price's top article generates over 14800 views. to your Favourites.

Colin D Price has sinced written about articles on various topics from Health, Landscaping and Health. Colin Price has gained a great deal of knowledge over many years by working in his garden and vegetables. He has now built a website. Colin D Price's top article generates over 27100 views. to your Favourites.
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