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Choosing The Best Type Of Garden

Before starting a new garden you should think what type of garden you want to have. The various types of gardens have a very different look, different products to harvest (if any) and of course they cause a different amount of work to be done. It can be hard to choose exactly one type of garden but it is much easier to start if you begin with a small range of plants that are similar to care for. It will be much less work and you can always widen your choice later.

 

If you just want your garden to look nice and colorful, your best choice is a flower garden. A flower garden usually mainly consists of perennial flowers. These only have to be planted once and then either stay for a long time or grow new each year from the tubers. Most of them are rather robust and are easy to care for. The main portion of work is in the planting stage and after that you only need to water them (depending on your local climate) and cut them if they grow too big. It depends on the climate in your area what kind of flowers can be considered perennials. You can easily find that out in your nearest garden center or by doing some online research. Flower gardens can be very beautiful but apart from some flowers you may cut from time to time you have no products you could harvest.

A different choice would be a vegetable garden. It usually requires a higher amount of work than a flower garden but you can harvest fresh crops most time of the year. Vegetables are not perennials so you have to seed or plant them every year. What kind of vegetables you are growing is mainly a matter of your likes and dislikes. You don't want to end up with heaps of vegetables nobody wants to eat. There are plants that must be started from seeds indoor and can only be planted outside after some time. Others are more robust and can be sowed directly in the garden. A small greenhouse can also help you to start growing plants early in the year and help them over the first time.

Another type of garden is a fruit garden. It usually requires even more work than a vegetable garden. More garden pests will be attracted by the fruits. Some of the fruit trees need to be pruned every year to regularly grow fruits. Apart from the right soil and fertilizer you also have to deal with pest control. With a fruit garden you have the longest waiting period from starting it until you can harvest your products. But if you do everything right you will probably have more fruits than you are able to eat yourself. Remember that it is a lot of work to care for a fruit garden but it is also very rewarding.

We have described some types of gardens now. Be sure to choose the right one for you. Of course you can also combine different types of gardens if your garden is big enough. Start with perennial plants in the first year. They will require much less work in the following years so that you have more time for annual plants. It is a real pleasure to eat fruits and vegetables from your own garden. Just don't start something you can't handle later because the work overcharges you.


 

Gardening Tips News and Information


Gardening By The Yard News

Landscape Resolutions - Patch.com


Landscape Resolutions
Patch.com
Idea for 2012: why not plant a few edible plants in your FRONT yard this year? Get the neighbors talking. This gardener's neighbors enjoyed watching the flowers, fruits and vegetables grow in the front yard last summer. It's January — time for those ...

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Green Thumb: 'Yard' work too tame for HGTV, ex-host says - Memphis Commercial Appeal


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By Christine Arpe Gang Since his HGTV show “Gardening by the Yard” was canceled in 2009, Paul James says he has enjoyed gardening off camera. Did someone take the "G" out of HGTV? It seems like the network is all mostly about buying and selling real ...

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Diggin In: 'Eat Your Yard!' - MiamiHerald.com


Diggin In: 'Eat Your Yard!'
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By KATHY VAN MULLEKOM Author and North Carolina gardener Nan Chase writes about her passion - edibles you grow and eat. Her book, "Eat Your Yard! Edible trees, shrubs, vines, herbs and flowers for your landscape," encourages you to pick plants for ...

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Welcome to the warmer zone: KC has more choices of plants - Kansas City Star


Bloomberg

Welcome to the warmer zone: KC has more choices of plants
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Kansas City is now officially in the warmer planting Zone 6 instead of the cooler Zone 5. That's not news for the butterfly bush in your yard that used to die back almost to the ground every winter but now is hardly fazed. Or the nandina that never ...
Global warming and gardeningCarmi Times
Gardening Map Of Warming US Has Plant Zones Moving NorthNPR (blog)
Figs in Boston area? Now you can grow them; New federal planting map adjusts ...Daily Journal

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BEHRE COLUMN: Conservancy chairman keeps 'living art' alive - Charleston Post Courier


BEHRE COLUMN: Conservancy chairman keeps 'living art' alive
Charleston Post Courier
By Robert Behre Ben Lenhardt often spends his spare time getting dirty in the exquisitely manicured yard next to his home in Charleston's historic district. But this work is just a slice of his devotion to preserving and maintaining gardens.

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Master Gardeners review accomplishments, prepare for new year - State Gazette


Master Gardeners review accomplishments, prepare for new year
State Gazette
Hundreds of wildflowers, trees, bushes and more were available during the Dyer County Master Gardeners' annual plant sale in 2011. Here, Master Gardener Mary Beth Sheppard helps a visitor select the right plants for his yard. Master Gardeners plan to ...

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