Posts Tagged ‘Gardening’

Vermiculture Business For Sale

Posted in worm farm secrets on January 20th, 2011 by – Be the first to comment

VERMICULTURE VOWS

Instant Curb Appeal

Author: Tiffany Rose

INSTANT CURB APPEAL. Increase the value of your home without hiring a landscape designer. Let's face it, in these challenging economic times we need to use this time wisely to maximize value of your home.

Multiple studies have shown the increasing importance of curb appeal in selling a home, especially in a competitive market.

According to the Real Estate Agent Community Trends survey, commissioned by JELD-WEN Windows & Doors. Out of about 500 realtors polled, 82 percent agreed that buyers unimpressed with a home's exterior will not want to look inside. The results also found that 90 percent of respondents agree that a sale depends on first impressions of the front entry, while 91 percent said that the home's exterior is just as important as what is inside.

Another study by The Florida Nursery Growers and Landscape Association compiled the following property value statistics:

  • Landscaping can increase the resale value of a property by as much as 14%
  • The sale of a property can increase by as much as six weeks
  • A landscaped patio can raise property values by 12.4%
  • A landscaped curb can increase property value by 4.4% and hedges can add 3.6%

As our economy starts to improve and home sales increase, you will be ahead of the game!

Create a stunning DIY lighted, landscape design using pre-fab, curved raised garden bed kits, which contains everything you need to transform your empty yard into a stunning garden oasis, in less than an hour. You can have your landscape done before your realtor comes over to appraise your home.

A great choice for raised garden bed kits are called Landscape In-A-Box. They are beautifully designed all-inclusive, eco-friendly, curved raised garden bed kits. They come in different sizes and shapes to add variety to your yard or garden. They appeal to the “green” buyer as well. Unlike pressure treated wood, these composite wood timbers do not leach toxins into the soil. They are easy to install with just a screwdriver and a mallet, and even include an optional solar lighting kit.

Talk about curb appeal!

Article Source: http://www.sooperarticles.com/real-estate-articles/selling-property-articles/instant-curb-appeal-1509.html

About Author:

Please visit Composers.com for information regarding compost bin, rain barrel, vermiculture, worm bin, red worms, raised garden beds, reel and electric lawn mowers, etc.


Buy Red Wigglers Composting

Posted in worm farm secrets on December 10th, 2010 by – 9 Comments
Initial Worm Poll Results

Tips On Making A Worm Compost Bin

by Richard Allen.

Keeping your trash can improve your garden and, not to mention, help in reducing your garbage output. Your left over vegetable scraps and tea bags can supply nourishment to your new vegetables and other garden plants. When vegetable and other organic scraps are eaten and processed by compost worms it becomes a high-octane plant food, also known as worm castings. A worm compost bin will get you well on your way to a low cost and plentiful supply of vegetable fertilizer.

The Bin – Step one is the actual bin. There are a variety of bins available to buy or for the DIY people building a compost bin can be fairly easy. The most common DIY bin is to use a storage bin. A 12-gallon bin would be a good start and than just add more compost bins as needed to expand production.

Drill -inch holes down the sides approximately 3-4 inches apart. A mesh can be used to cover the holes if you see flies buzzing around.

Creating Worm Tea (optional) – Worm tea gives your garden an instant boost. To add a simple compost tea option, just add a faucet or hole and plug towards the bottom of the compost bin. Add small amounts of water, do not flood out your worms, and allow liquid to drip into another container. Add about a cup or two to each gallon of water and water as usual.

Worm Bedding – Worm bedding is an important part of your worm composting environment. Worm bedding provides a place to bury your scraps, is used to maintain moisture levels, and gives your worms a place to compost. Bedding can be made from partially decomposed leaves, strips of newspaper, coconut fibers, and/or wood chips. My preference is mixture and I don’t like to recommend peat moss as it is not renewable and natural peat moss is becoming limited.

You will also need to mix in some dirt with the bedding. Since worms do not have any teeth they need some type of grit in their digestive track to grind the vegetable scraps up.

The Worms – Not just any worm will work and although systems can be created for regular earthworms the worm compost bin described above will require red wigglers. They will thrive in this environment as they also stay towards the top where you will be placing your scraps to be composted.

How Many Worms – For most worm compost bins you can start out with a ratio of 2:1. This refers to the ratio of the weight of worms and the weight of organic scraps you will produce each day. This means for every pound of organic scraps you add to the bin each day you should have 2 pounds of worms.

Worm Compost Bin Care – You should visit the worm bin daily until you get use to how things go. Keep a spray bottle handy to keep the bedding moist and the worm environment should be kept between 60 and 70 degrees F. Light is meaningless to them so some basements work well. If the bin has an unpleasant smell inside, try adding more bedding.

Creating a worm bin can provide fun and education to the whole family. It is a good way to explain the process to children and the worms can sometimes feel like pets.

Richard Allen composts to create fertilizer for his organic garden and to help the environment. For more composting areticles and how to make worm tea, please visit Discover Composting.com.

Article Source: ArticleSnatch Free Article Directory


The Organic Gardening Secrets.

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 26th, 2010 by – 2 Comments

Covers Nearly Every Bit Of Information About Organic Gardening: From Planning To Designing… From Understanding Your Soil To Improving It… From Choosing Your Plants To Planting Them… From Tending Your Garden To Harvesting Your Crops.
The Organic Gardening Secrets.

High Density Gardening.

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 17th, 2010 by – 3 Comments

How To Design, Build, Set Up, Grow With And Maintain A High Density Garden To Provide You And Your Family With Fresh, Wholesome And Tasty Vegetables.
High Density Gardening.

Organic Vegetable Gardening.

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 15th, 2010 by – Be the first to comment

75% Affiliate Payout – Organic Vegetable Gardening Ebook. Even A Novice Can Start An Organic Garden With This Simple Guide. Complete Step By Step Gardening Guide.
Organic Vegetable Gardening.

Introduction To Hydroponic Gardening.

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 14th, 2010 by – Be the first to comment

Introduction To Hydroponic Gardening Contains An E-book And An Audio Book That Will Be Useful To Anyone Who May Have An Interest In Learning How To Grow With Hydroponics.
Introduction To Hydroponic Gardening.

Hydroponic Gardening.

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 12th, 2010 by – 1 Comment

This Is A Super Fantastic Package That Comes Complete With A Beginners Guide To Hydroponic And Audio… An Advanced 463 Page Guide To Hydroponics… Super Bonus Diy Gardening On A Budget Also With Audio. High Conversions. Pays 75% Commission.
Hydroponic Gardening.

Off the Record: a New York City Gardening Primer

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 8th, 2010 by – Be the first to comment

ONE


The Union Square Farmers market in New York City is a perfect source for inexpensive and hearty regionally grown plants, herbs, and flowers. Get there first thing in the morning and you’ll quickly discover there’s too- much -to -choose- from. Stroll among the market stalls and weave between the Blew Family’s jumbo packets of rosemary , and the Migliorelli Farms sugar snap peas. Bring along your kitchen scraps and drop it off at the Lower East Side Ecology Center’s stand, and while you’re at it pick up a bag of ‘black gold’ (worm casting compost) for only 50 cents a pound. Then decide on home baked garlic & duck fat Ciabatta along with a too- beautiful- to -pass -up bouquet of freshly cut snapdragons. Bordered by 17th Street, Union Square West, 14th Street and Union Square East Directions: 4, 5, 6; N, R; L at Union Sq


TWO


CREST a neighborhood HARDWARE store in Williamsburg Brooklyn on Metropolitan & Union Ave. is unique in a sea of big-box chain stores. As soon as you walk in you hear TOP TEN AM-radio playing and, ’Mike’ whose been there for over two decades, sings out ‘hello sweetheart!’ Everyone is dubbed sweetheart, even ‘Finley’ the African grey parrot whose been in residence for 5 years. Isles 4, 5 and 6 are a gardeners eden– laden with plant food, organic seeds & soil, hanging baskets, rain wands, marble chips, pea gravel, green hoses, and watering cans. The prices are friendly too! 558 Metropolitan Ave Directions: L train to Lorimer


THREE


No wonder Martha Stewart came out of prison smelling like a rose. She’s transported her Everyday brand of gardeners provisions for K-mart with an A–Z line of really cute edible and annual seed packets. And just ripe for the urban gardener she’s individually wrapped a mini-series of tomato and strawberry patch green houses. K-mart 8973 Bay Pkwy, Brooklyn NY 11214 770 Broadway, New York NY 10003 Phone: 212-673-1540 250 W 34th St Fl CONC14, New York NY 10119


FOUR


Wrapped around the back of the 10,000 square-foot of Chelsea Garden Center on 38th and 10th AVE. are wooden barrels, black clay urns, Italian & Hungarian terra-cotta containers, stunningly hued Vietnamese glazed pots, and natural cedar crates in every imaginable size. In one way or another, everyone is a certified horticulturalist, largely through the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens education program. Just ask any idiosyncratic garden question and the easy going staff has a solution. 499 10th Ave, New York, 10018 – (212) 727-7100


FIVE


If you can’t grow it, go in its place. Cherry Blossoms in May, Roses in June. All year long the Brooklyn Botanical Garden provides a vibrant-green lovers escape. BBG is 52 acres of urban horticulture and botanical resource. Apply on line and help out in the gardens extensive volunteer and education program. Or become a member and enjoy the plus side of members only summer picnics, tour & class discounts, and pre-view seasonal plant sales. 1000 Washington Avenue, Brooklyn NY 11225 · 718-623-7200 Directions: The B or Q train to Prospect Park station. (The B train does not run on weekends.) The 2 or 3 train to Eastern Parkway


SIX


Snatching up abandoned and derelict city lots, planting flowers & vegetables, creating green-space and invigorating a neighborhood is essentially illegal. That said it’s been happening since 1973 in all 5 boroughs with unshakable influence by the Green Guerillas of NYC . Visit them online and find a community garden in your neighborhood and while you’re at it stop by the 18 gardens on the annual ‘Green With Envy Tour’ spread out over two Saturdays in late June. — www.greenguerillas.org


BONUS


Gardening is like any great adventure and a pocket sized guide or a list of rules is always handy.


1. Spend your money on good soil and the soil will feed the plant.


2. For beauty’s sake recycle stone, wood, iron, terracotta and other natural materials in your garden.


3. THINK COLOR. Experiment with monochromatic arrangements, color themes, and contrasting one-color, two-color and three color toned gardens.


4. Grow something that will attract butterflies–you’ll never regret it.

a. Bee balm

b. Cosmos

c. Marigold

d. Sunflower

e. Zinnia


5. Keep a gardening journal. (once winter rolls around you’ll be grateful)


6. Break the rules once.

Janice Hoffmann is founder and owner of Success Is Sweetest, a New York City Career and Lifestyle Coaching Boutique. www.successissweetest.com

A Beginners Guide to Healthy Organic Gardening

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 6th, 2010 by – Be the first to comment

These tips are just a few of the things about your organic gardening soil which are important. It makes common sense that your body will benefit from less toxic weed killers and pesticides, and your soil and garden insects will help improve the entire environment around you.

Organic gardening is not as difficult as many beginning gardeners believe it is. Quite simply it means you are going to plant your garden without using synthetic fertilizers, for making the plants grow and chemical pesticides to control the bugs. It really falls back to the farming principles used centuries ago before all the toxic chemicals started to be spread and spayed on all our plants and the ground.

The best way to make sure you get the biggest returns from your labor, regardless if its going to be flowers, herbs, veggies or a mish mash of several plants it’s best to have a detailed plan. And the best time to formulate your plan is in the fall or autumn, right after the fall growing season ends. This way you will have enough time to prepare the ground before the spring planting season begins.

Now is the time for you to actually determine what your selected ground is going to need, in the way of the proper nutrition to help your vegetation grow. Your plants will do well if they can receive about six hours of sunlight per day. In almost all cases positioning of your planting area in the south-east part of your ground will give more than adequate amounts of sunshine.

Once the proper location has been determined the next step is preparing the ground where you will be planting. To make the weed and grass removal successful you should perform the initial removal, then go back again a couple of weeks later and remove the weeds and grass which will have grown in the meantime. Turning the soil over two or three times with a rest of a couple of weeks in between helps to make sure you have weeded the roots out as well from the soil. Then mix in organic manure from chickens, cows or horses. Then laying a thick layer of wood chip or shredded newspaper on top will help to mulch the soil from drying out too much in summer, and protect the soil in winter.

You can also create an on-going compost cycle in your garden plot by simply digging in your fresh kitchen plant waste in spots that you rotate around the patch. This is a much simpler way to feed the soil than the compost bin, if you are unable to get that delicate balance right. Buying some worms for your soil is also a good idea if you don?t see them as you dig your soil. They are the best way to break down foods, aerate and fertilize the soil all year around.

Most people believe that chemical insecticides are essential to keep a garden under control. People think that without using chemical based pesticides, you just can?t control bug infestations. However, one of the best all natural ways to control the pest is to use their mortal enemy, birds.

It is very simple to attract birds to your garden every year, especially if you provide them with sheltered nesting areas. Not only do you furnish a nesting area for them but make water fully accessible to them. You can put something as simple as an attractive, large, water container or bird bath. Once the birds have been drawn to your garden and realize they can feast on your bug infestation your problem will be solved. And if you also provide some birdseed for the colder months the birds will know to always come back to your garden each season.

Also make sure you always plant plenty of flowering bushes that attract the bees and ladybird beetles. Learn the insects that help to pollinate your crops and that kill the destructive bugs. It is all about just helping Mother Nature to do what she does naturally.

It also makes sense to simply plant a bit more than you know you will need for your personal use. One special reason I will cover more later in this article. But the main reason is to make allowances for the fact that you will lose a percentage of your crop to insects and birds, so why not simply plan for that loss in the initial planning anyway. You should after all, help to feed the insects and birds that will help you fight off the rest of your predators.

It also just makes common sense that with an organic garden you will be healthier as you are not breathing in toxic sprays you use, or absorbing chemicals on your skin while you work in the garden. You will not need to spend so much time in your garden wearing breathing mask, eye goggles and gloves!

An hour a day of working in your garden will also improve your health and help in weight loss (burning calories), improve your blood pressure levels, strengthen the heart and lungs, build muscle, sharpen the mind. You will relieve stress and sleep much better.

You will receive such a sense of well being when you have a fruitful harvest, you just can?t beat it. Your family, friends, co-workers will also be grateful for any of your crop that you share. You will know you have done your part to help ?Mother Nature? return to her natural state and touched all the other human beings by doing so.

What other ways can you share the benefit of growing an organic garden?

Did you know that there are even bigger benefits in organic gardening besides having a more beautiful garden or eating healthier veggies and fruits? Actually there are more special benefits than most people and organic gardeners ever think about.

You can help improve the lives of people in your local community or around the world. It is true. Did you know you can feed children around the world with your organic garden? It’s really quite simple and only takes a little more planning and work on your part.

When you begin to plan your own personal natural garden you simply plan to layout a larger garden and plan for a bigger crop to harvest than you would need for your personal use. It doesn?t make any difference if it?s for flowers, veggies, fruits or bushes to beautify your yard. That is right! Just make it BIGGER. Then when it is time to harvest your crops, you will have more flowers, plants and veggies than you can possibly use by yourself.

Then, instead of carting buckets of spare fruit & veges to your workplace to give away,
instead take the bounty to the local Farmers Market or the Flea Market and sell it. You should not have any problem at all selling ORGANIC produce, whether it is fruit, vegetables, flowers, or potted plants you strike from cuttings. The fact that they are organic will be a huge advantage, and means you can ask for premium prices and you may end up with a pocket full of cash.

You should find that most shoppers are generous, especially if you put up a big sign telling the shoppers that 100% of all profits will be donated to XYZ Charity.

Then take the cash from your market sales that day and donate it to your favorite “Feed The Children” charity. When you do this a starving child will benefit from your garden, long after you harvested your crops for your personal use.

And this is only a few of the multiple benefits of organic gardening, as you will discover for yourself over the years ahead.

If you are a real garden enthusiast, or just starting out to learn all there is about gardening, you will want to check out all the valuable information and gardening tips that Rajul Kaushik has put online for you for free. You can see at http://www.squidoo.com/gardening-resources as well as his blog at http://www.gardeningforgoodhealth.com

Your Tomato Gardening Tips Will Involve Problems Growing Tomatoes That Should Be Expected

Posted in Worm Farm Plan DIY on May 3rd, 2010 by – Be the first to comment

When my Dad was a young boy in the Depression his family worked on a tomato farm as part of the government’s relief program. You can imagine he was a great one for giving tomato gardening tips and advice. The fact remains that there were always tomatoes in our garden, so that juicy tomato flavor that only comes from a freshly picked tomato, is something we dream about all winter. Especially after eating those horrible winter tomatoes in the stores! This article discusses some of the problems growing tomatoes can bring.

Garden tomatoes are actually easy to grow and most people will have few problems growing tomatoes. There are some common things that pop up each and every year.

Here is a list of five problems and some tomato gardening tips and solutions.

Problem 1: If you accidentally buy cherry tomatoes instead of regular tomatoes, you have big problems with thousands of little tomatoes! The only way to tell the difference is with the little tabs in the tomato plant packs. You must read the tabs carefully and hope they are right.

Problem 2: Staking the tomatoes. It all starts out nice and simple, and neat. As the tomatoes plants grow, it is harder, since you will run out of stake to keep up with the growth. The art of staking, pruning, tying will keep you busy all summer. Do not be surprised if they fall over anyway!

Problem 3: Tomatoes need lots of water. Believe all tomato gardening tips you read on water . Tomatoes will not produce, and will get fungus and disease when there is not enough water. Even the time of day you water makes a difference. Water in the hot sun, it evaporates, and water too late, in the evening, you run the risk of fungus.

Problem 4: The end of the growing season brings bugs, worms and tomato rot. If you planted enough plants, you should get enough tomatoes, even with this bad stuff. The good news by this time in the summer, you are getting tired of caring for your plants, so it does not matter!

Problem 5: Tomatoes will grow wild! After awhile thing just get plain crazy. The tomato plants just keep making new shoots and they keep on growing all over the place. One tip is to calculate when there is not enough time left before the first frost for a new tomatoes to grow to full size, and just chop off the new flowers. This lets the tomatoes that are left get all the nutrients.

These problems growing tomatoes do not result in destroying your plants, so you still get a nice juicy sweet tomato to put in a salad or on a sandwich through the summer. It is never a bad idea to read up on tomato growing tips each spring, so you can start dreaming about that juicy tomato on your summer hamburger.

Everyone can use some extra help and advice with some expert tomato gardening tips and ideas.

Click to Find out Secrets to Growing Incredible Tomatoes

Look for some free guides and other valuable information to help you grow some nice, juicy, tasty tomatoes! http://www.tomatofun.info