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Secret
of a Green Thumb Are you one of those people
who say "I can't get plants to grow", "I can kill any
plant" or something like "Every plant I touch dies", then read
on. Conversely how often have you
heard some people described as being the opposite, "… has a green
thumb", " … has such good luck with plants". Plants grown by people with a green thumb seem to grow as if by magic
or luck, however the one and only 'magical' or lucky ingredient these people
possess is knowledge and understanding of the conditions that those plants
require. These people also have the interest and capability to provide those
conditions, for those plants. Look around you at the plants that are being grown by yourself and in
your neighbourhood. These plants come from all round the world. The natural
environment from which these come is almost as varied as the plants
themselves, from alpine heath through tropical rainforest to open desert. Then we come along and remove
them from their natural environment and expect them to survive in the dry
atmosphere of our homes (to them) or the alien environment of our gardens. We expect them to cope with an
environment with sometimes extremely sporadic watering and quite often no
food, and yet we expect them to survive. The light may be extremely far
too bright or almost nonexistent, or only coming from one side, right at the
times when these plants are trying to grow. Or the atmosphere may be far too
hot and/or dry for them, as inside a house. Yet despite all this, many
plants struggle on, clinging weakly to life, quite often not very happily and
usually with a diseases and pests. Those gardeners who succeed either choose
plants that can stand the types of conditions for which they are obtained, or
alter those conditions to suit the plants. So what can you do to become a
green thumb? Get out there and read. Read a gardening book, hop onto the
Internet, watch a gardening program on the TV or listen to a gardening
segment on the radio. Or alternatively talk to someone who has a good working
knowledge of plants, such as a worker at the local nursery. Find out about that plant you
are about to purchase. Find out what sort of environment it came from
originally. Find out what are the conditions it needs to grow happily and go
about providing it. This includes: Give it the correct amount of
sunlight it requires. Look at making sure it has the
correct amount and type of fertilizer, for optimum growth. Keep an eye out for the pests
and diseases that may get to it. Give it the correct amount of
water that it craves. Look at the humidity of the
air around the plant, (homes are usually far too dry for most plants), look
at raising the humidity around the plant/s. Group them together, or put a
saucer of water under the plant. But be careful of things that may grow in
that saucer, (eg. Mosquito larvae). Protect it during the period
of establishment into your garden. If the plant has a period of
the year when it rests, let it do so. Mostly it is in winter, but
many Mediterranean plants rest during the 'dry' summer period. Get all those steps correct and then people will start
saying that you have a green thumb. You can just stand there and nod your
head in the realisation that being a green thumb is no easy task, it actually
requires a lot of time, work, enthusiasm, energy and knowledge. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright by Ron M. Williams
The Bare Bones Gardener is
a qualified Horticulturist and a qualified Disability Services Worker. One of
his sons has Asperger’s Syndrome and he has Asperger’s himself. He hates
spending money on stuff that doesn’t live up to the promises given. So he looks for cheaper, easier,
simpler or free ways of doing the same thing and then he passes these ideas
on to others. It’s a website where you will find a strange mix of Gardening
& Horticulture, Disability & Carer work and Parenting of Disabilities
& Someone with Asperger’s Syndrome stuff all rolled into one. Website -http://www.barebonesgardening.com/ Blog - http://barebonesgardening.blogspot.com/ Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ron_M_Williams |
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