5 Easy Ways to Be Organic
- Feed the soil with compost! Whether your purchase your compost or make it yourself, compost is one of the best things you can add to your soil. It boosts the retention of moisture, improves drainage in clay soils, adds nutrients, and puts beneficial microbes into the soil. Compost won't burn your plants and makes the soil easier for plants to grow a string root system. You can't go wrong with compost!
- Ditch the chemical sprays in favor of organic sprays. Sprays with neem oil do a great job at controlling insects and it's extracted from a plant. Diatomaceous earth can also be used to control insects without doing any harm to animals. Diatomaceous earth comes from fossilized creatures that are crushed. The crushed remains are sharp and cause injuries to all kinds of insects.
- Consider companion planting! I've touched on this before but you can add beauty and function to your garden by integrating flowers and herbs in with your vegetables and fruits. Once you explore companion planting and learn about it giving it a try is a "no brainer"!
- Mulch! Use organic mulches in the garden to retain moisture, keep plant roots cooler, and help feed the soil. Organic mulches like shredded bark chips, hardwood mulch, pine needles, and straw all will break down eventually and feed the soil as they do. Don't choose stone mulches. You do get some permanency with them but that permanency is at the cost of feeding the soil and is difficult to remove later.
- Make your own compost! This should go without saying but really can't be said enough. If we go back to number one on this list you can see why we compost but making it yourself rather than buying it is easy and cheap! Vegetable kitchen scraps, coffee grounds, yard waste, farm animal manure (chickens, goats, horses, cow, etc.), leaves, grass clippings, and many other things can go into your compost bin. Your compost bin doesn't have to be special either. There's no reason to spend money when a pile in the back will be sufficient. My pallet compost bin has produced compost just fine!
Have you explored organic gardening yet? If not I hope you'll give it a try!
*"Traditional" and "Conventional" in this case are used to refer to the methods of gardening that use chemicals. Prior to their invention everything was organic gardening!