Tuesday

BAKING SODA IN THE GARDEN

Baking Soda has multipurposes in the garden. You can use it as a pesticide, to discourage pests including rabbits, kill weeds, use it as a fertilizer for your houseplants and use it to check to see if your soil is acidic.

Use baking soda in the following ways:
  • Pesticide
    • Take 1 cup of cooking oil, 6 tsps. of baking soda and 3 cups of water, fill a sprayer and use it to kill white flies, aphids and spider mites.
    •  In warm climates you can sprinkle baking soda full strength on crabgrass to kill it. You may need more than one application.
    • Take 1 gallon of water and add a tablespoon of baking soda and use it to prevent powdery mildew. This will only work as a preventative.
  • Discourage pests
    • Sprinkle baking soda around the soil of your garden and it will keep rabbits, ants, silver fish and roaches away. Put directly onto slugs to kill them. Be careful not to get it on the plants.
  • Kill weeds
    • Sprinkle directly on weeds growing in and around your sidewalk and driveway cracks. This may a take more than one application.
  • Fertilizer
    • Take a gallon of warm water and mix 1 tsp. of each epsom salt, baking powder, saltpeter and 1/2 teaspon of ammonia. Use this as a fertilizer in your houseplants
  • PH level
    • Wet soil and take a small amount of baking soda and sprinkle onto soil, if it bubbles your soil is acidic with a PH level under 5.
Using baking soda in the garden gives you an alternative to using other harsh chemicals to prevent some of the problems you face everyday in your garden. It is also economical.

Friday

LISTEN TO THE BIRDS SING

Attracting birds to your garden can be fun and will provide vast opportunities to watch and enjoy birds in your garden. To attract birds you need to provide water, food and shelter.

Water: Provide water by adding a fountain, birdbath or pond to your garden. There are all types available at your local nursery or garden store. It's just a matter of preference.

Food: Hyssop, Anise Hyssop, Comfrey, Rosemary, and Catmint will attract hummingbirds. Trumpet shaped plants will also attract hummingbirds. You can attract other birds with berries by planting Chokeberry Mulberry, Serviceberry and Elderberry bushes. Flowers such as Cosmos and Sunflowers also provide seeds for birds. Dogwood trees also provide berries that attract bluebirds. Feeders such as hummingbird feeders, finch feeders and birdseed feeders also provide food for birds.

Shelter: Thistle and milkweed contain materials that birds use to make their nests. I also use hanging baskets made with natural materials that birds get building materials from. You can also provide birdhouses for them to nest in and plant trees and bushes.

I enjoy sitting outside and listening to and watching the birds. It's very relaxing. I recommend that you listen to the birds sing.

The below link is an interesting video of a Cardinal feeding its babies.

http://youtu.be/LjVsA5oT-Sw

DON'T STEAL FOOD...PLANT A GARDEN

 Vegetable bandits strike as food prices soar...

The high price of produce, especially for tomatoes after the deep winter freezes, has attracted the attention of a ring of sophisticated vegetable bandits.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42603382/ns/us_news-the_new_york_times/from/toolbar

CONSERVING WATER IN YOUR GARDEN AND YARD

With summer rapidly approaching, now is the time to consider water conservation. Most places face water shortages and have water restrictions. Summer is the critical period when trees and plants require more water. As populations continue to grow, more water shortages will occur.  As they should, more cities are beginning to monitor and restrict water waste. Water preservation is economical and environmentally friendly.

You can conserve water in your garden or yard by:
  • Installing a rain barrel;
  • Grouping plants together based on their individual water need;
  • Planting drought tolerant and native plants;
  • Reusing water used in the household, such as diverting the water from your rinse cycle from the washing machine into a barrell and using the dish rinse water. 
  • Using drip hoses; and
  • Setting your lawnmower blade at 3 inches.
Conserving water and improving our environment is everyone’s responsibility. Please do your part. If you have other methods of conserving water, please leave a comment and I will add it to this post.

Wednesday

TEST YOUR SOILS PH LEVELS

Knowing your soils composition is important to the health of your plants. Soil provides the foundation for your plant growth. Good soil feeds your plants. It needs to have the right ph balance for the plants that you are growing. Plants such as azaleas and rhododendrons prefer a more acidic soil, where iron is freely available; if they don’t have it the leaves will become yellow between the veins.

To test your soil dig 6 to 8 inches deep and mix a few samples of soil gathered at different places in your yard with equal parts of water and then bury a piece of litmus paper strip in the soil. Leave in for 10 seconds, remove the strip and rinse. If the paper strip is pink then the soil is acidic. If it is blue, then leave it in an additional five minutes, remove, if it is tinged pink then the soil is slightly acidic, if it still blue then the soil is alkaline.

You can also use baking soda to test if your soil is acidic. Water your soil and sprinkle baking soda onto it, if it bubbles, the soil is acidic. You can also buy a test kit at your local garden store to do it yourself.

Add Peat Moss or small amounts of Aluminum Sulphate to neutralize alkaline soil. Add Dolomitic Lime to neutralize acid soils. Always read the labels to determine the right amount of product to use. Compost will also help neutralize soil pH and add nutrients at the same time.  

Thursday

USES FOR VINEGAR IN THE GARDEN

Use vinegar in your garden to:

Kill unwanted weeds (Full strength)

Keep ants away.

Clean garden tools, birdbaths, furniture, tables and clean hummingbird feeders. (Full strength, rinse feeder & birdbath well)

Boost  azaleas, rhododendrons, hydrangeas and gardenias (1 cup of white distilled vinegar per gallon of tap water.)

Discourage animals in an area.


Preserve and freshen cut flowers.  (2 tbsp. of white distilled vinegar & 1 tsp. of sugar)


Sanitize outdoor furniture and tables.

Spray to kill slugs (1 part water and 1 part white distilled vinegar.)

Place soaked cotton balls into a small container with lid, poke a hole in the top and place in the garden to keep rabbits from eating your plants.

Remove stains on your hands.


Wash vegetables (1 tbsp of white distilled vinegar in 1 ½ quarts of water)

Friday

APRIL CHORES

Spring has sprung. It's time to start working in the garden. Weed now to get a good start and make it easier on you later. Mulches will help you keep weed growth down and make weeds easier to pull. Weeding after a rain is also easier. Now is the time to plant warm season annual seeds directly into your flower bed or in containers. Follow the directions on the package. You will need to keep the seeded areas moist until germination. Thin them out when they are large enough to transplant. Plant any excess seedlings into other areas of your garden, if you wish. You can also purchase annuals for instant color. Additionally ,it's time to remove spent flowers, trim back excessive growth, and apply fertilizer in your established beds. Look at new soil you buy, before use, for contamination. Prune spring-flowering shrubs after flowering and fertilize roses. Insects to be on the lookout for include aphids and bagworms. Large numbers need to be controlled by pestides. However, if there are few of these pests, then you can use other methods. You can use a water hose to remove aphids and you can control bagworms by picking them off and burning them.