Gardening is enjoyable, rewarding, relaxing… and hard work. There is always something to do – watering, weeding, planting, harvesting.
Most gardeners enjoy the time they spend working in their gardens, but there comes a point when garden tasks can pile up, making you can just a little overwhelmed. Here are some gardening and planning tips can put you a little ahead of the game.
Most are common sense (you’ve heard them before, but just haven’t got around to implementing them), and some may seem like more work. But implementing them will make gardening easier for you, leaving you more time to sit back with a cool drink and just enjoy your creations.
1. Feed the Soil
Start with great soil and you’ll wind up with great plants. Healthy plants get fewer diseases, attract fewer pests and need less water. Right there, you’ll save time!
Begin by getting a soil analysis kit from your local plant nursery, and test your soil. If your soil is deficient in any minerals or nutrients, take steps to amend the soil with slow release organics. Then keep adding organic matter, such as compost, seaweed extracts, or well-rotted manure regularly.
Avoid synthetic fertilizers that can actually destroy the beneficial organisms and organic matter in the soil. They are just a short-term fix.
2. Group Plants by Their Needs
I’m sure you’ve heard the saying “Right plant for the right spot.” That’s the beginning of the equation. Of course you’re going to want to put sun lovers in the sun and ground covers where they can roam. But consider how efficient it would be if you put all your water hogs together so you could just turn on the sprinklers or drag the hose to one area and be done.
3. Choose Lower Maintenance Perennials
Make low-maintenance perennials the backbone of your flower garden. These are plants that can take care of themselves, and require little in the way of deadheading, staking, pinching or pruning throughout the growing season.
Here are some low maintenance perennials to consider:
* Peony (Paeonia) zones 3-8
* Daylily (Hemerocallis) zones 3-8
* Black eyed Susan (Rudbeckia “Goldsturm”) zones 3-8
* Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) zones 3-8
* Stonecrop (Sedum) zones 3-8
* Coral Bells (Heuchera) zones 3-8
* Hostas zones 3 – 9
Check out what works best for your area, soil type, climate and personal preference.
4. Raised Beds and Containers
Containers and raised beds give your garden boundaries, providing the ultimate in control. In containers, you control the soil, water, exposure and even limit the growth of the plants.
Raised beds separate the garden beds from their surroundings. You have the same controls as in container gardening, just on a larger scale; and you’ll be saving your back from some bending.
5. Install Drip Irrigation
Drip irrigation sounds like it might be a chore to install, and it does take time – measuring, purchasing, and installing, but it really has been reduced to a tinker toy level.
Unless you rely on rain to water your gardens, you will actually save money in the long run. Drip irrigation is far more efficient than any other type of watering. And it has the money saving advantage of putting the water right where your plants need it. By installing a timer, you won’t even have to take the time to turn it on.
6. Mulch Again
This is common sense and something you’ve been told a thousand times. Yet many gardeners only view mulch as decoration. Mulch does make a garden look more attractive, but it also allows you to cut down on watering, weeding and fertilizing time.
7. Get Some Wheels
One good garden cart or wheelbarrow can ease the carrying, lifting and moving you have to do in the garden. Don’t go out into the garden without it. You can tote your tools, move plants, harvest, toss weeds right into it down to the compost heap. No matter what size, you’ll get more done, with less stress on your body, with wheels.
8. Enlist Your Children
Teach your children and grandkids early in life how much fun gardening is.
Planting, harvesting, learning what’s a weed, collecting insects – these are all activities that will get them out into the garden. They may not like pulling weeds or deadheading the flowers, but what child doesn’t like picking and eating fresh strawberries, raspberries or blueberries?
Well, maybe it won’t lessen your work load, but you just may be training a future gardener!



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