Welcome to lawn garden organic matter

A Garden is a Friend You Can Visit Anytime. Welcome to lawn garden organic matter

 
Add URL
Advertising
Articles
Submit Article
Gardening Books
Resources
organic garden Navigation
Article / Links
Organic Garden
Basics Gardening Organic Rodales Rose
Brighton Garden Landscaping Organic
Compost Gardening Organic
Ebook Gardening Organic Resource
Florida Gardening Organic
Garden Organic Ryton
Gardening Herb Organic
Gardening Organic
Gardening Organic Seed
Green Harvest Organic Garden Supplies
Lawn Garden Organic Matter
Organic Garden Fertilizer
Organic Garden Plans
Organic Gardens

More Resources

  Article / Links
Winter Gardening
Winter is an important period in the gardening season, more so than you’d think. While winter is in full swing, compost is continuing to decompose and get ready for use for the spring. Additionally, Read more...

  Article / Links
Fun And Food In Home Grown Vegetable Gardening
By JanMarco
Growing vegetables in your garden can save you money. During harvest time, your own produce becomes part of your meals. Home gardeners feel deep satisfaction in preparing salad or seasoning the Read more...


Double digging: Preparing the soil by systematically digging an area to the depth of two shovels.

lawn garden organic matter is a rewarding experience, providing your family's table with chemical free nutritious food. Organic Gardening is fun, healthy and easier than you may think!

Why not complement your organic vegetable and herb gardening by instituting the same healthy organic and sustainable principles in your lawn and landscape?

Organic Gardening - A Growing Trend
By Judith Schwader

In the past decade and a half, organic products have achieved almost mainstream status. Where organic produce was a specialty item in a few upscale grocery stores in the early 1990s, today's supermarkets commonly offer organically produced items.

An upward spiral is happening: Organics have become more available and more affordable. The result is that a larger proportion of the population buys organics. This leads to an increased general awareness of the benefits for people and the environment of organic production.

Greater awareness of the benefits contributes to a greater demand for organic products. Higher demand encourages growers to an even larger production of organics. Increased production results in organics being increasingly available and affordable… and upward the trend goes.

During the 1990s, organic product sales dramatically increased at the rate of more than 20 percent every year. By the beginning of the 21st century, sales of organic products passed the $9 billion mark. Today in 2006, the majority of US consumers (7 out of 10) buy organic food at least some of the time.

These statistics are encouraging indications that organic production is here to stay. This is good news for the well-being of people and the environment.

**What ORGANIC means**

Fifteen years ago, organic growers might have had to explain to shoppers at a farmer's market what the label "organic" means. Today, most people understand that for a product to be labeled organic, it had to be grown without using synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, or hormone supplements.

But organic growing is a system, and is not just a matter of substituting natural materials for synthetics. Whether on the large scale of the market farmer or the small scale of the backyard gardener, the underlying principles of an organic system are to work within the boundaries of nature to grow healthy food.

The system starts with a focus on healthy soil, which supports healthy plants. When plants are strong, they are naturally disease and pest resistant.

**Why ORGANIC is better**

Rather than apply chemicals to cure disease and control pests as conventional growers must do, organic growers are oriented toward prevention through continuous soil improvements. It's a big difference in attitude: the chemical quick-fix vs. long-term soil building.

The benefits of taking the long-term approach are immediate. Rather than having to keep indoors during a "re-entry interval," (after using poisonous chemical pesticides, there is a required safety period when people must avoid the area), organic gardeners never experience exile from the location where they grow food.

Also, there is the difference in the effect on local water sources. Organic gardeners don't contaminate ponds and groundwater with synthetics.

In short, gardeners who live where they grow food have a particular motivation and advantage in using an organic system: personal health and safety. But everyone benefits when organic methods are used because they are sustainable: wholesome food is produced in a system that respects the natural environment.

Article Source: http://www.articlemap.com

Life-time gardener Judith Schwader specializes in organic gardening methods. She shares expertise, humor, and advice for your gardening success at A to Z Gardening. Also visit FB Home for additional home and garden information.





 

We strive to provide only quality articles, so if there is a specific topic related to organic garden that you would like us to cover, please contact us at any time.

And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our lawn garden organic matter website.

 

Gardeners Choice

 

 

© 2004-2008 ATLGardening.com. All rights reserved. lawn garden organic matter