Thursday, June 18, 2015

How To Establish Your Own Cheap Food Plot Planter

By Freida Michael


Groceries form a large part of every household's monthly budget. One of the most expensive items in the grocery budget is fruit and vegetables. However, it is impossible to exclude these entirely, so people try to find ways of obtaining them more cheaply. One way is to grow them yourself in your garden or yard. This is not always as difficult as it sounds, especially if you use a cheap food plot planter strategy.

The first step is to determine what is suitable for your garden. You should look at the soil, the size of the yard and also how secure it is. If the soil is stony or full of concrete pieces, you need to clean it first, either through manually de-stoning it or using a simple metal filter. This is much like panning for gold.

In terms of space, you need to match the species of plant to the size of the garden. Creeping plants like melons or pumpkins need a lot of space because they grow along the ground. Then there are buried crops like potatoes and yams. These need space underground to produce their crops, which are formed in the soil and are harvested by digging them out.

Security is another issue. If the yard is too easily accessible, passersby or neighbors might notice that you are growing food crops and try to steal them. They will typically try to do this just before harvest time, when the produce is nearly ripe. This is so because the thieves anticipate that you are about to harvest the crops yourself, so they try to take them before you do. Your general household security should be able to prevent this, but where it doesn't you might invest in a season of cultivation only to lose your crops right at the end.

It is easy to make your own compost at home. It takes time, but it is as useful as any that you can buy in stores. All that you have to do is to dig a depression in the ground and throw all your kitchen waste into. Over time, it accumulates and fills the depression. You then dig the compost into the soil. There is nothing the matter with this homemade compost.

Compost can be made in DIY fashion by excavating a space and then depositing all your household vegetable waste matter into it. When it has been filled, dig the rotting vegetable matter into the soil and bury it. This takes more time than buying the compost but it is free and the resultant product is entirely suitable.

If the soil is not prepared, you cannot expect very impressive crops. Poor soil will either not support mature plants, and they will die while they are young, or they will grow up into stunted specimens that produce a low harvest of small or misshapen produce.

The produce that you see in the stores is subject to various agricultural techniques that you cannot practice in your garden at home. These include genetic modification, large-scale irrigation, the use of herbicides and pesticides and the planting of commercial seed. However, you should not try to match commercial produce, since you are saving a large amount of money by growing your own products at home. You might sometimes be surprised at how successful this can actually be, or how big some of them can grow.




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