Re: [Organic_Gardening] Hi - new member
Hello Rae,
I felt the same way about my garden for several years. In February, I decided that this would be the year to sacrifice and establish my gardens again. It has been a trial but I've done it. Here is what I've learned.
1. Do only what you can do and hire in what you can't. Out of school boys can work for next to nothing.
2. Start small and work one area at a time. Do it well so you don't have to spend too much time weeding or watering.
3. Group like plants in one area so all will require your attention at the same time. Not the same plant but the same needs.
4. Dedicate a time slot for the garden and don't deviate, even if it is too hot. If rainy- oh well- enjoy your tea while watching your garden grow.
Enjoy.
Cynthia Ybanez
Architectural Redesigns LLC
www.a-redesigns.com
-----Original Message-----
From: "rae.sibbitt" <rae.sibbitt@yahoo.com>
Sender: Organic_Gardening@yahoogroups.com
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 15:28:50
To: <Organic_Gardening@yahoogroups.com>
Reply-To: Organic_Gardening@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Organic_Gardening] Hi - new member
Hi - I'm a new member with a big out of control garden that I need to get enthusiastic about again. Any tips for fitting gardening in amongst working, shopping, cooking and all that other stuff you do...? Main gardening activity over the last few years seems to have been 'picking flowers' and moving the trampoline around.
Rae in Milton Keynes, England
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7:48 AM
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