iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Gardening
 

Organic Gardening Tips: How To Keep Your Flowers Healthy All Year Long

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Annie Spiegelman

It's time we started showing some respect and gratitude for the underappreciated earthworm and his boy back-up band, fungi & bacteria. They are the true humble heroes and workhorses who do the necessary dirty work to keep your soil full of nutrients.

Yet, in our home gardens, we're constantly killing earthworms with synthetic fertilizers. We're baking them to a crisp with unnatural, high-levels of nitrogen and salts. Worms don't want to see any neon colored manmade crystals.

Remember, earthworms are garden superstars, but they don't insist on the center-stage spotlight! They thrive in moisture and dark. All they require is some good old fungi, bacteria, a banana peel or two and yesterday's sports page to create nature's best fertilizer in their castings, for free!

5 Dirt Diva Reasons Why Gardeners Should Love Earthworms (Eisenia foetida)

1. Worms help air and water enter and circulate through soil. As they crawl underground they loosen the soil so plant roots have plenty of oxygen and room to spread.

2. They break down organic matter, such as leaves, into nutrients plants can use. Earthworms transport minerals from the subsoil to the topsoil, and they keep the soil's pH level and organic matter content just right.

3. Worms secrete slime, which contains nitrogen, one of the most important elements for healthy plants. Nitrogen gives the dark green color to plants and increases the growth of leaves and stems.

4. They eat and dump, and leave behind those precious worm castings or pure fertilizer. Their castings are rich in trace minerals, plant nutrients and plant growth enhancers. In fact, a recent study by the Rodale Institute showed that worm castings have growth benefits that exceed even those of plain compost.

5. Castings have a NPK (Nitrogen, Phosphorous, potassium) ratio of 3.2-1.1-1.5. These nutrients are readily available to the plants and will never ever burn your plants.

These five dirty diva reasons are exactly why you should build a worm bin for your garden.

How to Create a Worm Bin So Your Flowers Stay Beautiful All Year Long:

1. Get yourself an opaque 10-14 gallon plastic storage bin at least 12 to 16 inches deep, with a tight fitting lid. Drill a dozen pencil sized holes in the top and sides for ventilation.

2. Tear your newspapers into 1inch strips lengthwise for bedding or use your shredded documents that you neglected to show the IRS. No color or glossy paper. Wet the bedding with a garden hose and wring it out like a moist sponge.

3. Buy some red wigglers! You can find it at Suburbanhabitat.com, or check with your local plant nursery. Start with 1 pound. (Eight adult red worms can produce 1500 babies in 6 months!)

4. Fill your bin with the wet newspaper and 2 big handfuls of garden soil. Mix it up and gently add the worms in, covering them in the paper. Add a handful of food scraps under the newspaper. Cover the bin and keep it sheltered from heat or cold. You could keep the bin under your sink or in the garage shed.

5. Feed them fruit, vegetable scraps, coffee grounds, tea bags, eggshells, leaves, grass clippings, yard waste. No meat or dairy. Chop up food items into smaller pieces.

6. Check on your earthworms once a week to make sure the bedding is still damp. Don't feed them more food till they finish everything on their plate! They will eventually eat the bedding so add more as needed.

7. In 3 months you will have rich crumbly soil-like material. These are worm castings! To harvest, move all of the bedding and castings to one side of the bin. Put fresh bedding and food on the empty side of the bin. Give the worms a few days to move on over to the new side. You can then harvest the old side of the bin. Dig the castings into garden beds or sprinkle them on top of your soil.

For those organic gardeners and divas who don't have the time, space or guts to build and maintain your own worm bin, products like TerraCycle Worm Poop can become your new best friend. It's all natural, eco-friendly plant food made from organic garbage.

Fertilize your yard with worm poop each season and I guarantee your flowers will stay healthy all year long. Try it! It's fun.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Master gardener and author Annie Spiegelman, attracts a whole new generation of women, girlfriends & moms to the joy of working in nature. For more tips on how you can keep your flowers healthy all year long while building a better future, go to http://www.dirtdiva.com
Article Tags: bin [See Dictionary], worm [See Dictionary], worms [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on May 22, 2008 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

Metal Shed – Benefits and Disadvantages
Submitted by: Nick Schofield

Back in the days when I used to go to my grandparents, I always remember them having a wooden shed I used to love that shed, I spent many a happy summer afternoon playing near that shed with my granddad close by...

Best Flowers For Your Garden
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

Thinking about starting up a garden Gardens can be very pretty...

Plant a Garden - Live Healthier
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

For a healthy and rewarding hobby one should look to planting a garden It can provide the hobbyist with a boost of Vitamin D from the sunlight of the outdoors as well as some great exercise...

Gardening Design Easy As One, Two, Three!
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

Garden design defined- Many people wonder what garden design exactly entails Well, its actually a very straight forward concept consisting out of an artful process which in turn comprises of design, creation and planning precise layout of not only garden plants but also as the landscape areas self...

Plant a Garden and Better Your Health
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

If you have been looking for a new hobby then maybe one you should consider is planting a garden It can be rewarding, healthy and educating all at the same time...

Thyme For Herbs to Make an Appearance in Your Garden?
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

It can be easy to think of a garden as being nothing more than an outdoor space, and somewhere to have pretty flowers and plants on show...

Big Leaf Periwinkle Vinca Major
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

The Big leaf Periwinkle, Vinca major, is also known as Greater (rosy) Periwinkle, Big Periwinkle and Large Periwinkle...

How to Make Flowers Last Through Winter
Submitted by: Shockley A.

For those who love flowers and love having outdoor and indoor flowers around their home, they know that winter can be a tough season on their plants...

Isnare Free Articles Portal
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Pressed flowers Pressed flowers are just as lovely as fresh flowers and they last forever Pressing your own flowers can be a very fun project...

Fast Growing Trees For Your Landscaping
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Is your yard lacking something Is your yard lacking something...

The Basic Know-How on Having a Garden
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

Various techie gadgets and toys are taking up much of our time We are usually indoors and strapped in front of the computer or any other gaming gadgets...

A Super Fast Growing Evergreen
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Leyland Cypress Trees Do you have noisy neighbors and would love to have a plant that helps block out the noise...

We Are Climbing Jacobs Ladder in Our Online Nursery
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Jacob’s Ladder The name Jacob’s Ladder came from the Greek word – polemos which means war The Jacob’s Ladder is a gorgeous plant that thrives in part shady area, if you give it too much sun then it looks yellow and dingy losing its flare and appeal...

Buying White Pines Trees For a Border Evergreen From Your Local Plant Nursery
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

White Pine Pinus Strobus - Immense Harmony White Pine and Pinus Strobus are synonyms This tree is also known as Northern white pine or soft pine...

The Burning Bush Shrub,An Excellent Green in Summer,A Vibrant Red in Fall
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Burning Bush B&B – Not The Biblical One The burning bush is a deciduous shrub also called Euonymus atropurpureus or Wahoo...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy