Vegetable Garden Soil
Preparation
Preparing your vegetable garden soil is one of the most
important steps to creating a vegetable garden. Proper
vegetable garden soil preparation ensures your
plants will be healthier, grow larger, and produce bountiful
produce for you and your family.
Preparing vegetable garden soil is so important because
vegetables require a lot of vitamins and nutrition to grow and
produce food properly. Using quality topsoil, preparing your
vegetable garden soil the fall before planting, and using
plenty of compost or organic materials are all very important
steps in the process. In some areas of the country, you may
also need to test the soils pH levels, and balance them out for
the vegetables you intend to plant.
If you have the time, the best vegetable garden soil
preparation is done in the fall. Choose the area you'll be
planting vegetables next spring in the fall, then start getting
the soil ready before winter comes. This gives the garden soil
time to compost organic materials added to it, and be turned
and worked by the weather, worms and other beneficial
bacteria.
Preparing your vegetable garden soil in the fall is a fairly
simple matter. Once you've chosen the location of next spring's
vegetable garden, turn the soil. Remove any weeds and roots
from those weeds as you find them, and remove any large rocks
too. Try to turn at least several inches of the garden
soil.
The next step in preparation is to add compost or organic
materials. If you have compost already made, simply mix this in
to the turned soil. If you don't have compost though, you can
make it as part of your garden soil preparation since it will
have all winter to decompose. Simply mix organic materials into
your vegetable garden bed. Some excellent things to add include
leaf and grass clippings, shredded newspaper, used coffee or
tea grounds, and fireplace ash or sawdust. Mix these materials
into your turned soil, and come next spring you'll simply stir
it around and find yourself with very fertile ground for your
vegetable garden.
If you're doing your vegetable garden soil preparation in
the spring, you'll perform the same steps with turning the
garden soil and enriching it. You may however, want to buy some
compost if you don't already have some made. This provides the
best mix of vitamins and nutrients naturally, without
subjecting your newly planted vegetables to harsh and
potentially dangerous chemicals.
Compost can often be purchased from organic garden supply
centers, or from other organic gardners too. If you don't have
a source to purchase compost from though, you can do a bit of a
quick soil preparation instead. This will take about three
weeks to work well.
Turn your vegetable garden soil, then mix in partially
decomposed organic materials. The best choices here are cofee
and tea grounds, finely chopped vegetable or fruit matter from
kitchen scraps, and fireplace ash or sawdust. Since these all
have very small particles, they tend to decompose fairly
quickly. Mix them into your soil with a good watering, then
cover the prepared garden bed with a thin layer of regular
topsoil. Then simply go out every few days to water and stir
the garden bed soil. In about three weeks your new vegetable
garden soil will be ready for planting.
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