A gardener friend of mine who is as traditional as they come tuned me in to food4wealth. As she outlined the food4wealth concept for me, I didn’t know what to marvel at: the product itself or her enthusiasm at something so revolutionary. Beth is definitely the most staid gardener I know, and she has never been one to fall for anything not mainstream. Beth, however, just couldn’t stop raving about food4wealth and as she was virtually roping me in to help her create an organic garden using its principles, I naturally had to find out what it was all about.
How to Start a Vegetable Garden for Beginners: A lot of people with space in their backyard are realizing that a vegetable garden can be very profitable. With the price of organic tomatoes nowadays, a backyard vegetable garden could easily supply your family with fresh veggies that taste that much better for being eaten so soon after harvest. If you are among those who would like to learn how to start a vegetable garden for beginners, then this article is ideal for you.
1. Go to your local nursery to buy bell pepper seedlings. You should be looking for short, stocky plants with thick stems. These types of seedlings are the healthiest. Bell pepper seedlings that are tall with thin stems have grown lacking sunlight.
Tomato Soil Preparation: One of the crops that taste amazingly good when eaten shortly after harvest is the tomato. If you have ever eaten one that has been vine-ripened, you will know that grocery-bought tomatoes fall miles short. For this reason, many home vegetable gardeners choose to set aside space for growing their own tomatoes. Proper tomato soil preparation is necessary to ensure that your garden produces plump and healthy tomatoes.
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The main purpose of vegetable garden planting is to allow your family to enjoy fresh produce. It therefore makes sense to plant only those vegetables that the family enjoys eating. Make a point of choosing vegetables that taste incredibly good when eaten within a few hours from being harvested from the garden such as vine-ripened tomatoes and sweet corn, to name a few.
That’s you too can grow healthy home grown vegetables.
Why not make 2011 the year you get back to nature
You and Your family will not regret it.
A healthy vegetable garden bed will enrich your diet and help the planet.
As a hobby, tomato gardening in general is one of the most fulfilling actions that you can embark on. All you need to have is a little pad of land and a touch of free moments, usually in the spring, depending on what type of vegetables you are organizing to grow. Also, this practice has the benefit of being really effortless to do, so that anyone can approach it without fear of loss.
It can be vital to find the best seeds for your future plants because of a couple of very clear reasons. you’ll want your vegetables to be quite balanced and you will need to have them grow more substantial, at least some of them, in order to be able to use the seeds for your next crop. If the primary seeds or seedlings are of weak level of quality, so will the future plants be, so choose thoroughly. Be sure to have some data about these seeds and also make sure that you are only obtaining the necessary portion. You will never be able to in reality use the seeds you bought now 1 year from now because they are actually tiny plants, so they will go bad eventually.
Vegetable Gardening is effortless, enjoyable and inexpensive. All you need is a two of bucks for the seeds, maybe 45 bucks for a two of tools and a good deal of water. If you have all these items you can surely start vegetable gardening right now.
Any reliable seed house can be depended upon for good seeds; but even so, there is a great risk in seeds. A seed may to all appearances be all right and yet not have within it vitality enough, or power, to produce a hardy plant.
If you save seed from your own plants you are able to choose carefully. Suppose you are saving seed of aster plants. What blossoms shall you decide upon? Now it is not the blossom only which you must consider, but the entire plant. Why? Because a weak, straggly plant may produce one fine blossom. Looking at that one blossom so really beautiful you think of the numberless equally lovely plants you are going to have from the seeds. But just as likely as not the seeds will produce plants like the parent plant.
So in seed selection the entire plant is to be considered. Is it sturdy, strong, well shaped and symmetrical; does it have a goodly number of fine blossoms? These are questions to ask in seed selection.
If you should happen to have the opportunity to visit a seedsman’s vegetable garden, you will see here and there a blossom with a string tied around it. These are blossoms chosen for seed. If you look at the whole plant with care you will be able to see the points which the gardener held in mind when he did his work of selection.
In seed selection size is another point to hold in mind. Now we know no way of telling anything about the plants from which this special collection of seeds came. So we must give our entire thought to the seeds themselves. It is quite evident that there is some choice; some are much larger than the others; some far plumper, too. By all means choose the largest and fullest seed. The reason is this: When you break open a bean and this is very evident, too, in the peanut you see what appears to be a little plant. So it is. Under just the right conditions for development this ‘little chap’ grows into the bean plant you know so well.
This little plant must depend for its early growth on the nourishment stored up in the two halves of the bean seed. For this purpose the food is stored. Beans are not full of food and goodness for you and me to eat, but for the little baby bean plant to feed upon. And so if we choose a large seed, we have chosen a greater amount of food for the plantlet. This little plantlet feeds upon this stored food until its roots are prepared to do their work. So if the seed is small and thin, the first food supply insufficient, there is a possibility of losing the little plant. 
You may care to know the name of this pantry of food. It is called a cotyledon if there is but one portion, cotyledons if two. Thus we are aided in the classification of plants. A few plants that bear cones like the pines have several cotyledons. But most plants have either one or two cotyledons. Growing Spinach from seed is easy.
From large seeds come the strongest plantlets. That is the reason why it is better and safer to choose the large seed. It is the same case exactly as that of weak children.
There is often another trouble in seeds that we buy. The trouble is impurity. Seeds are sometimes mixed with other seeds so like them in appearance that it is impossible to detect the fraud. Pretty poor business, is it not? The seeds may be unclean. Bits of foreign matter in with large seed are very easy to discover. One can merely pick the seed over and make it clean. By clean is meant freedom from foreign matter. But if small seed are unclean, it is very difficult, well nigh impossible, to make them clean.
The third thing to look out for in seed is viability. We know from our testings that seeds which look to the eye to be all right may not develop at all. There are reasons. Seeds may have been picked before they were ripe or mature; they may have been frozen; and they may be too old. Seeds retain their viability or germ developing power, a given number of years and are then useless. There is a viability limit in years which differs for different seeds.
From the test of seeds we find out the germination percentage of seeds. Now if this percentage is low, don’t waste time planting such seed unless it be small seed. Immediately you question that statement. Why does the size of the seed make a difference? This is the reason. When small seed is planted it is usually sown in drills. Most amateurs sprinkle the seed in very thickly. So a great quantity of seed is planted. And enough seed germinates and comes up from such close planting. So quantity makes up for quality.
But take the case of large seed, like corn for example. Corn is planted just so far apart and a few seeds in a place. With such a method of planting the matter of per cent, of germination is most important indeed.
Small seeds that germinate at fifty per cent. may be used but this is too low a per cent. for the large seed. Suppose we test beans. The percentage is seventy. If low-vitality seeds were planted, we could not be absolutely certain of the seventy per cent coming up. But if the seeds are lettuce go ahead with the planting.
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