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VEGETABLE GARDENING

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For some people any kind of gardening is enjoyable, but vegetable gardening has a special attraction that flower gardening does not have. The vegetable gardener can eat what comes out of his or her garden. Ripe, juicy tomatoes, tender peas, crisp lettuce, tasty zucchini, fresh green beans and delicious squash are just a few of the products that can go straight from the vegetable garden to the kitchen. Some of them, after a rinse under the kitchen tap, can go directly to the dining room table.

Doing your own vegetable gardening has a few other benefits. For one thing, the vegetable gardener harvests the vegetables when they are at their peak. Those homegrown vegetables have far greater nutritional value than any of the vegetables available in the produce section of the grocery store. That means they are better for the health of the gardener’s family. The vegetable gardener also knows what pesticides and other chemicals the vegetables have – or haven’t – been exposed to.

Vegetable gardening is also good exercise. It gets a person out into the fresh air. Vegetable gardening is a great way to relax and forget about the stresses and worries of everyday life. It is an activity that anybody, young or old, can do. You can do it by yourself, or make gardening a family affair.

Vegetable gardening can help you fulfill creative needs and gain a sense of accomplishment. When you see your table laden with food that you grew with your own hands, you can’t help but feel good about yourself. When you share your harvest with friends and relatives, you get a special feeling that is quite unique.

The benefits of vegetable gardening carry on long after you have picked the last tomatoes and pulled up the last carrots. Thanks to freezing and preserving, you can enjoy your homegrown peppers, zucchinis and tomatoes months after you harvested them. Of course, by growing your own food, you save some money, too.

It is not necessary for you to own a large piece of land to take up vegetable gardening. Any little plot of ground can be turned into a garden, as long as the gardener tends the plants carefully. A gardener can grow vegetables in containers, in window boxes, and even indoors. As long as you have access to some soil, water and sunlight (or artificial light) you can be a vegetable gardener. Just buy the seeds, invest some time and work, and one day you’ll be sitting down to enjoy a meal of your own home grown vegetables.

 

Vegetable Gardening Information News

Our Garden: Gardening in containers - San Jose Mercury News


Our Garden: Gardening in containers
San Jose Mercury News
By Joan Morris If your yard is full of rocks or your backyard is nothing more than a concrete patio, you may think gardening is out of the question. It's not. Many vegetables and most other plants can be grown successfully in containers.

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A fresh crop of new gardening books - The Republic


A fresh crop of new gardening books
The Republic
There's also information on building or buying accessories for these fantasy gardens. $20; Mackey Books. Note: If you have a fairy garden, we would like to visit it; contact Kathy at kvanmullekom@aol.com. “Heirloom Fruits and Vegetables.

and more »

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Gardeners discover benefits of planting in containers - Rapid City Journal


Gardeners discover benefits of planting in containers
Rapid City Journal
More and more people are turning to container vegetable gardening as a simple, economical way to enjoy fresh produce. For apartment dwellers with limited space, container gardens are ideal. But there are other reasons to think small.

and more »

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Vertical veggies: Tower Garden methods cultivate easy bounty - Memphis Commercial Appeal


Vertical veggies: Tower Garden methods cultivate easy bounty
Memphis Commercial Appeal
Novice vegetable gardeners have always been told that success begins and ends with the soil. Building a rich soil by adding compost, humus, lime and other organics is almost certain to produce an abundant crop. But some gardeners are switching from ...

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Imagine a Web of Local Growers and Gardeners Able to Find Each Other Online - Patch.com


Imagine a Web of Local Growers and Gardeners Able to Find Each Other Online
Patch.com
Enter Elmhurst gardening guru and local food activist Todd Jones, owner of Every Last Morsel. The company builds and maintains vegetable gardens for homeowners. Jones, never one content to rest on his laurels, has a unique business plan that is poised ...

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