Friday, 19 June 2015

Some Tips On Your Cheap Food Plot Planter

By Freida Michael


Groceries form a large part of every household's monthly budget. One of the most expensive items in the grocery budget is fruit and vegetables. However, it is impossible to exclude these entirely, so people try to find ways of obtaining them more cheaply. One way is to grow them yourself in your garden or yard. This is not always as difficult as it sounds, especially if you use a cheap food plot planter strategy.

The factors that are important are the security of your garden, the size of the planting area and the nature of the soil. Rocky or polluted soil should be prepared before planting. You remove the stones and solid rubbish with your hands or by panning, using the same equipment that gold panners use. This might be an improvised wire mesh bowl that is loaded with soil and then shaken empty, leaving only the stones and pebbles, or other waste.

Your yard also needs to be big enough for the plants that you want to grow there. Some plants, such as watermelons or pumpkins, spread along the ground and require a large amount of space. Others, such as potatoes, grow deep into the soil and should be allowed room underground to expand.

The security of your home is a factor too. Crops which are visible to people in the street might be targeted by thieves. The usual time for this crime is shortly before the crops are ready to be harvested. This time is chosen by thieves because they try to steal the produce before you harvest it at the more natural time. If the security at your home cannot stop this eventuality then you should not waste a season of cultivation on stolen crops.

If the soil is poor, i. E. It is sandy and dry or has no nutrients in it, you need to prepare it by using fertilizer or compost. Fertilizer is commercially available and can be purchased. Make sure that you use the right fertilizer. If you are not sure about this, ask the sales assistant. Compost can be made by discarding any household vegetable waste into the soil.

Bad soil is not conducive to successful crops. It causes the young crops to die, or they grow up into stunted, unproductive plants. The crops will be small and unremarkable, while the parent plants will be under-size and they will also not mature completely.

If the soil is not prepared, you cannot expect very impressive crops. Poor soil will either not support mature plants, and they will die while they are young, or they will grow up into stunted specimens that produce a low harvest of small or misshapen produce.

Fresh produce in stores is usually nice to look at, of a large size and healthy in appearance. But then commercial farmers use tactics that you cannot, such as industrial-scale irrigation, GM seed and agricultural pesticides and fungicides. You should not compare your own efforts to such produce. On the contrary, your own garden might surprise you with the size of its crops, or how beautiful they are, or simply how easy it is to grow them.




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