How Window Box Makes Urban Gardening Easier

If you plan to grow a garden in an urban area you should be aware of the challenges coming your way and plan accordingly so you will get to see healthy and green plants and not withered leaves and flowers. According to Windowbox.com, some of the most common issues of urban gardening are as follows:

1. Urban areas usually have limited residential spaces. It means that you have to be pretty creative on how you want to put up your garden. Basically, you have to decide what plants or flowers you want or need to grow within minimal areas. A good research is required to make the most out of your garden.

2. There are lots of industrial buildings nearby and sometimes chemicals and other harmful pollutants can affect the health of plants. Plant soil can be easily contaminated depending on what buildings are nearby. You can use Google Map or a local business listing to know if there are any source of pollutants around.

3. Tall buildings can increase the effect of dry wind and can cause plants to wither faster than normal. Aside from this, tall buildings also block the sunlight needed for your plants like taller trees in a thriving forest.

4. Lastly, if your living on a leased space, there may actually be legal restrictions on what you can do with urban lands. Meaning, gardening may also be restricted. You better check with your landlord and get permission if you plan to grow a garden.

It’s true that gardening is not only for people who are located in less industrialized places. Even if you are living in the city or within any urban areas, you also deserve to grow fresh vegetables and magnificent flowering plants.

A beautiful garden is not only meant for those who live in rural areas. If you are an urban person, you also deserve to see some colorful and fresh plants. With the help of window boxes, urban gardening is not much of an issue.

Window boxes are originally made to resolve the problem of growing a garden in public places. Today, whether your living within a rural or an urban area, window boxes can be used for container gardening or as a part of home decor. Window and flower boxes can ultimately accentuate your home or apartment in magnificent ways.
There are dozens of flower boxes types available in the market today. However, one that catches my attention is the Composite Flower Box. This type is made with a revolutionary new product called Cellular PVC (AZEK) that will not rot or mildew. These flower boxes are “just like wood” and understate the architectural grade quality of the material. These composite window boxes (rot proof PVC) are planters made to give you a lifetime of maintenance free flower box enjoyment that looks and feels like its made from real wood.

Aside from Composite Window Boxes, there are also other types like Fiberglass Window Boxes, Wrought Iron Window Boxes, Vinyl Window Boxes, Metal Window Boxes, Aluminum Window Boxes, Wood Window Boxes, Copper & Bronze Window Boxes, and Galvanized Tapered Window Boxes.

Each type has its own unique features and specific use depending on some particular factors to consider like the materials used, color and its decorative harmony in your home. Browsing the internet could also help you find great deals. It will help you save time, and you can also compare the prices and designs of different window and flower boxes around your area.

Have fun!

Why Hydroponic Gardening Is Becoming More Popular

Hydroponic gardening has spiked in popularity recently mainly because the quality and productivity of hydroponically grown plants has been unmistakable. These plants grow faster and healthier than their soil-grown counterparts. This is due to the fact that they are grown in an environment where there is a virtual limitless supply of nutrients and water at their disposal.

These hydroponically grown plants, because they are not grown in soil, do not need to fight off diseases and pests which are natural in soil. Pesticides can be decreased or even eliminated.

And because the nutrients and water are delivered in just the right proportion directly to the plant’s roots, they are better equipped to grow – faster, healthier, larger!

Hydroponically grown plants have the following benefits:

– They will provide high levels of nutrition

– They will be better tasting

– They will be rich in color.

In hydroponic gardening you will find that the crop’s water and nutritional needs are less complicated and sometimes more effective. Just a few simple measurements and it will be evident what adjustments need to be made to the nutritional balance in the water. All the guesswork is eliminated!

Although nutrient solutions are available from local hydroponic suppliers and contain the correct proportions of essential minerals, gardeners may also make their own nutrient rich solutions. This may sometimes require quite a bit of extra work however.

When it comes to the growing medium that will provide plants their nutrition, different materials have been successfully used. Materials such as sand, porous rock, gravel, pumice, perlite, and vermiculite have all proven to be good choices. Fired clay particles can also be used. These all are capable of providing a way of getting the nutrient rich water into the plant’s root system.

Also, there are various types of containers and pumping arrangements for delivering nutrient solutions to the garden and draining it back to the storage tanks for reuse.

If you’re just starting out in hydroponic gardening you may be wondering which types of plants are most suitable for hydroponic gardens. The answer to this is tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, and cucumbers. There are some types of tomatoes that will continue to produce year round.

Some plants can be started from seeds and seedlings. In this case use commercially available rock wool plugs submerged in the media. These make excellent incubators for germination and seedling growth.

And since hydroponic gardens are self-contained, they can be located just about anywhere space permits. It is not unusual to find these by windows, on rooftops, or in closets.

Something Fungal This Way Comes…

The gardening headlines this week have been plastered with the threat of two new diseases that could potentially devastate Europes indigenous tree population.

In southern France, along the famous Canal du Midi, a plan has been in motion since last winter that will see the felling and destruction of 42,000 plane trees in the region. This is due to the arrival of Ceratocystis platani, a disease that, since the 1970s, has been blitzing across Europe, originating in Italy. It is believed the blight, endemic to North America, was brought across the ocean by U.S. soldiers in World War Two. While the Midi, perhaps due to its recently endowed world heritage title, is certainly the most noticeable among the losses, the disease has also become prevalent in Switzerland, Germany and Greece, where it now threatens a vast percentage of the original Plane population.
The Canal, a world renowned tourist attraction, was originally designed as an economic conduit that allowed the merchants of old to bypass the treacherous Atlantic Ocean en route to the Mediterranean Sea. However, in a somewhat ironic twist, the original species of Mississippi Plane that have successfully adapted to this affliction are being imported in great numbers in order to replace one of the Canals main attractions. Unfortunately, while Toulouse can cater to their favoured humid environment, it is unclear whether this species will be viable to supplement the depletion that chillier areas of the continent have suffered.
The threat does not stop in Toulouse however – given the virility of the affliction, tree pathologist Steve Woodward (University of Aberdeen) agrees that it poses a grave threat to the urban based Planes of cities like Paris and London. It is the Plane that so commonly and attractively lines our city streets.
“We are talking about a massive disaster here if it continues to spread,” he says.
The disease is a fungal infection that, once exposed to the roots of the organism, will completely overrun it within 3-5 years and due to the damage this causes to the plants integrity, it is imperative that it be removed, lest it should fall and endanger passers-by in doing so. The disease is characterized by cankerous sores appearing on the inner bark of the tree, as well as an accelerated decline in both the quality and density of the plants foliage. No wound to the outer bark is too great or small to escape it and contact equals instant infection.

In addition to this threat from abroad, a new menace has been identified in rural Devon as a potential watershed moment for the diminishment of our domestic Yews and Lawson Cypresses in the form of Phytophtora lateralis. Identifiable by the patchy colouring of its trunk, a tree will also often exhibit slightly lighter foliage in places followed by out of season autumn colours. The tree will succumb soon after, as this foliage deterioration signals that the tree has become totally infected. While certain soil drenches can be utilized in the earlier stages of the disease, these will likely prove ineffective once it has advanced past the root structure; aside from which, use of these drenches on a mass scale would likely cause further environmental concerns and prove something of a pyrrhic victory.

Due to this increasing encroachment of pests and diseases, a body has been established to specifically target incoming detriments to our native plant life. This group, known as the Tree Health and Plant Biosecurity Action Plan, has been allocated seven million pounds with which, over the next three years, they will attempt to exert a tighter control on the intrusion of foreign fungi and pathogens that threaten the endemic population.
“If we don’t act now, we could end up with a similar situation to the 1970s when more than 30 million trees in the UK died [as a result of] Dutch elm disease.”
-Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman.
The key responsibilities of the plan will include the monitoring of exotic plants allowed to cross British borders, as well as increasing the knowledge and awareness of currently existing domestic threats.

How Beautiful Can Your Outdoor Space Be

How Beautiful Can Your Outdoor Space Be?

The answer to the question of How Beautiful Can Your Outdoor Space Be is only constrained by your imagination. Putting aside your budget for a minute, think of how you would really love your garden to look. It doesn’t matter how large or small your garden is, if you have any outdoor space there are many ways to utilise it so that you can get enjoyment from it for most of the year. Of course, if you are lucky enough to live somewhere with the right climate then there is no reason that you cannot be enjoying your garden all year round.

You will need to give some thought to what you actually want to use your garden for. Do you want somewhere to relax, to entertain, does it need to be family friendly. You might want lots of vibrant colours or even prefer to mix flowers and vegetables. Would you prefer raised beds so that you don’t need to bend over when you are weeding. Do you need wider pathways for wheelchair access. No two people have exactly the same needs, and no necessities should preclude something from looking good.

Some things that you might want to consider are a decking or patio area. Then do you want this area to be open or enclosed. How about a pergola or arbour over part of it. This could give you a nice shady area to escape the full glare of the summer sun. Then of course you could have a barbecue or outdoor kitchen at the edge of this area. Wouldn’t it be great to eat outside when the weather is good, even better if you can cook outside as well. You might want to fence this area off. Do you go for timber, brick or stone. Keep it muted, natural colours or paint it something vibrant and vivid.

Another consideration is outdoor lighting. If the weather is nice then you want to be outside as often as possible. Use the right lighting and you can stay outside as late as you like. Things to think about apart from general mood lighting are do you have any features in the garden that would be enhanced with lighting. This could really raise your outdoor space another level.

What about heating when it is a bit cooler. Would a fire pit look good in your garden. Could you take advantage of hard landscaping and get a stone wall and patio area to soak up the sun during the day, then this will slowly release the heat later on when you want to sit outside.

Have you thought of outside furnishing. What colours and styles do you like. How durable does it need to be. Are you going to leave the furniture outside or will you be putting it under cover when not in use.

That’s an awful lot to be thinking about, then of course you will still need to consider your budget. Are you the sort of person who has not only the imagination to picture all of this, but also the ability to bring it all together within your specific budget. If so, then get planning and go for it. Get it done and start enjoying your new beautiful outside space.

On the other hand, if you are not sure how to get started (or you just don’t have the time) then you don’t need to give up. You can always hire the services of a Garden Designer. If you use a local firm, then they will know what your local growing conditions are like. They can advise you after listening to what you want as to what your best options are. Do you want the best person to plan and build your ideal outdoor space. If so, then talk to your local Auckland garden designer Pasley Park Landscape Co:- http://www.park.co.nz/ .

Geranium, Begonia And Lavender Help Gardeners Create Patriotic Gardening Ideas For Diamond Jubilee

A true gardener is an artist and can plant a garden to look like a picture of beauty, and in this year of the Diamond Jubilee gardeners are planting their gardens to honour the Queen with patriotic colours.

Gardeners all over the UK will be prompted to fly the flag for Britain and plant their gardens this year in the form of red, white and blue designs in beds, borders and containers. Blue and white lobelia, the red geranium and salvias and many other bedding favourites will be the mainstay for many borders, of course it will be a challenge to get these colours in the garden in time for the jubilee celebrations in the first week of June.

The ivy geranium can be grown in baskets and come in beautiful five-petal flowers in white with lavender markings, deep pink, purple, white, red, salmon, purple and burgundy, and can easily make a wonderful patriotic display maybe with blue and white lobelia and red geraniums all planted together, there are many plants that will offer the red, white and blue of the flag, the begonia with pure white petals also makes a wonderful hanging plant the begonia leaves are pleasantly colourful on vines that grow up to 3 feet long as they cascade over the hanging basket.

Containers are another way of flying the flag plant up a variety of plants in red, white, and blue. There a lot of garden centres and nurseries that are already tuned into the event and will supply a pack of the three colours in different plants.

Hanging baskets are a popular addition to patios, and outside walls and fences, and whether or not you want to plant up especially for the royal occasion, there are many plants that look especially great in baskets, for example the trailing verbena plant a fast-growing hanging basket plant that blossoms from spring to the hard frost season, and colours including pink, purple, white, red and lavender. The Fuchsia and petunia also make wonderful hanging basket plants.

Containers is another way to plant up different plants for pleasure, lavender plants grow well in containers, although lavender has a large, spreading root system, it prefers growing in a tight space, a pot that can accommodate the root ball with a couple of inches to spare would be a great choice.

The pot should have plenty of drainage, rot root is one of the few problems experienced by lavender plants, but remember that container grown lavender will require more water than garden grown plants.

A spokesman for Blooming Direct a horticultural business located on the island of Jersey said yes we have noticed that gardeners are buying more red, white, and blue flowering plants, but we are still doing good business with the more vibrant colours such as oranges, and bright yellows, we have a huge selection of garden plants, and are on online shopping facility which delivers all orders to the UK FREE, we take great trouble to pack carefully so the customer receives all the plants in perfect condition. He went on to say, we have many offers, on plants, gardening tools, garden furniture, we also offer gift vouchers which we think makes a perfect gift for a keen gardener.

For further information visit: www.bloomingdirect.com or you can visit their Facebook page to discover more offers.