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My dad stopped growing our vegetable garden when I was young and never explained why. I'd like to see if anybody out there can give some suggestions on how to get started and if it would be reasonable to do.

2007-10-03 04:15:05 · 5 answers · asked by Psalm 24 2 in Home & Garden Other - Home & Garden

5 answers

Of course it's a good thing! Just a bit of work. Till the land with a good compost to prepare the soil before planting. Start out with things like tomatoes, green peppers, potatoes, carrots, green beans,lettuce, cucumbers - anything that you like to eat really. I find corn to be hard to grow, since I am limited on space and you need it to be several rows thick.

2007-10-03 04:20:49 · answer #1 · answered by J*Mo 6 · 0 0

It can be a lot of hard work with digging and weeding and watering, and some things will grow better than others depending on where you live, but if you have the time and energy, it can be fun and satisfying. With a little research you can find out what grows best in your area, and also, some vegetables like being planted next to each other and grow better that way. a few marigolds among the tomatoes will keep some critters away.
Good luck and have fun !

2007-10-03 04:31:28 · answer #2 · answered by silverheelsX 2 · 0 0

Of course it's a good thing !! They'll be fresher than almost anything else you could buy.

You're also adding greenery to the neighborhood, converting CO2 to O2, etc.

When I was little (about 10), my Dad tore out our swing-set and sandbox, and started a 12x12 foot garden. It took three seasons to get the soil conditioned (compost), but for 15 years we were overloaded with fresh beans, tomatoes, and zucchini. Dad would take a grocery-bag of veggies to work every-other day to get rid of our excess. We also dabbled in peppers, chard, bok-choy, and winter-lettuce.

I live in an apartment now, and have a small herb-garden in my kitchen, and a tomato plant in a tub on my balcony.

My brother has a ranch, and has 3 apple trees, 2 walnut trees, and a 12'x12' ft garden (with massive fencing to protect from the deer) that produces almost all their veggies.

Good Luck, and I hope someone can help you with the "feasibility" issue for YOUR location.

2007-10-03 05:01:43 · answer #3 · answered by mariner31 7 · 0 0

Yeah. We some bitter cherry timber, some raspberry, blackberry, and mulberry timber and a trouble-loose salad backyard. Lettuces, spinach, collards, beets, tomatoes, carrots, onions, cucumbers, broccoli, cauliflower, radishes, beans, probable some issues I forgot. We even have wild ramps and rhubarb that strengthen on the component of the hill. Figured why not. we've the gap, we've the time, and the stuff tastes lots extra powerful whilst it fairly is that sparkling. Plus it saves funds, that's continually a advantageous bonus. She's nevertheless too small to truly help. She helped final 365 days often via choosing issues, eating some and depositing others interior the basket. This 365 days she helped dig the trenches and he or she'll probable be a extra powerful picker too. i think of the backyard could help some, i think of merely us eating a sort helps the main. i'm especially valuable she'd nevertheless eat the comparable way if we caught to in elementary terms markets and did not strengthen our own, even with the shown fact that it fairly is nevertheless advantageous to have.

2016-11-07 03:43:32 · answer #4 · answered by scasso 4 · 0 0

Well it's better because the taste it downright juicier and it's organic. My family plants tomatoes, sweet peppers, jalepenos, eggplants, celery basil and other herbs. Tomatoes are the most productive. You've gotta till your soil good and give it lots of water in the early stages.

-Hope this helps.

2007-10-03 04:46:18 · answer #5 · answered by Rina 2 · 0 0

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