Tag Archives: Gardening

Advantages of Having A Chicken Coop At Home

You have finally made up your mind on raising your own chickens. But you are hesitant, because you are clueless as to why you should have a chicken coop in your very own backyard. Simple, read on these three benefits of raising home grown chickens straight from your backyard today:

1. Assurance of monthly savings. But, how? Home grown chickens allow you an opportunity to save more and take home the savings for more important expenditures and investments.

Imagine the benefits of guaranteed fresh eggs and fresh chicken meat monthly? Would that be not a reason enough to pursue building your chicken coop now? Your family would sure be happy to be having a constant supply of fresh eggs and chicken meat at the table.

2. Chickens will maintain your backyard’s lawn pest-free. Chickens as we all know feasts on anything organic from worms, beetles, bugs, and other harmful insects and pests. They are also fond of weeding your backyard lawn from grass and even dried leaves as they move around your backyard in search for something they could eat.

Chickens also love to eat up unsightful weeds and leaves from the backyard ground. These ruins your backyard lawn, so having chickens ensures a clean and well-landscaped backyard lawn.

3. Chickens are very low maintenance. Keeping chickens is as easy as one, two, three! You do not have to train, pet, walk, or teach your chickens some tricks for them to survive and grow healthy. To ensure that your chickens are kept healthy and happy, you merely have to supply them food and water, and they’re all good. Cleaning their coop and providing a well-ventilated place for them to stay will make your chicken’s day. Aside from the fact that they are very low maintenance, they also bring in some income! That’s an unbeatable combination of benefits you can’t simply ignore.

So, what are you waiting for? Start breeding your chicken and build a chicken coop at your own backyard today.

If you are looking for ready made chicken coop, visit Howie Kingsly’s guide on how to find chicken coops for sale and find a cheap chicken coop.

Successful Growing Of Vegetables

As soil breaks down over time the race of bacteria must be noticed – the beneficial nitrogen-fixing type that live on the roots of legumes such as peas and beans. If you pull up a flourishing pea or bean plant, you will notice a number of little nodules or lumps on the roots. Here the bacteria are at work making more nitrogen than they need for themselves, and on this surplus nitrogen the plant depends for supplies.

Accordingly, if peas or beans are new to your garden, the seed should first be inoculated with a culture of the proper bacteria. This is a simple operation, since the inoculant can be bought as a black powder for a few cents and merely needs to be shaken through the seeds before they are sown.

Obviously, the soil is a highly complex body. Nature, which is not pressed for time, may have taken a million years making it fertile with plant food materials. Man comes along and quickly robs this fertility by intensive cultivation, so that it must be rebuilt yearly by the application of organic material such as manure and compost, supplemented by inorganic fertilizers which supply, in readily accessible form, some of the chemicals mentioned above, built up in the soil much more slowly by natural processes.

Even a casual observer will notice by the difference in the color of soils from black to red, that they vary considerably in their constituents. Whether these elements are in proper balance and in, sufficient supply for satisfactory plant growth cannot be determined by smell, sight or touch; a chemical test is necessary. This is one of the first things to be done in the early spring. A home soil-testing set is inexpensive and interesting, but samples will also be tested, usually free of charge, by your state agricultural experiment station. Your local seed store will give you the address and tell you just what to do. You should receive a report from the station within a week or two indicating what, if anything, your soil requires.

In sum, therefore, the A, B and C of successful vegetable gardening are good seed, good light and good soil. Given these, your plants should come up healthy and strong – but so will the weeds, often from seeds that have been deep in the soil for many years. They must be scuffled down when they are small, before they enter into competition with your vegetables. Afterwards, a mulch, or thick layer of grass clippings, leaves or straw, should be spread around. This will not only keep the pesky weeds from coming up, but will help to conserve essential moisture in the soil and to maintain an even soil temperature.