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Growing Marijuana: California Medical Cannabis Gardening Tips from Jorge …

Monday’s California Supreme Court ruling that cities like Riverside can ban medical cannabis dispensaries re-emphasizes the importance of personal cultivation for the state’s estimated 750,000 marijuana patients. So we Skyped with Jorge Cervantes, author of “Marijuana Horticulture: The Indoor/Outdoor Medical Grower’s Bible”, now in its fifth edition, to put together this primer on the basics of legally growing medical marijuana in California.

The Law
Marijuana is still federally illegal, of course. But Californians in 1996 crafted defenses for qualified medical marijuana patients and caregivers prosecuted in state courts for crimes like marijuana possession and cultivation. Qualifying medical conditions include: “cancer, anorexia, AIDS, chronic pain, spasticity, glaucoma, arthritis, migraine, or any other illness for which marijuana provides relief.” A 2010 survey of patients at an Oakland medical cannabis clinic showed the most common conditions for which marijuana was providing relief were pain, insomnia, anxiety and depression. In practices that’ve been going on globally for at least ten thousand years, patients smoke, vaporize, ingest or topically apply the active ingredients in cannabis – cannabinoids – for symptom relief. Cannabinoids like delta-9-THC and CBD are created in the unfertilized female flower tops of the plant.

Qualified patients with a valid recommendation have a medical defense in court for growing up to six mature plants or 12 immature plants – unless a doctor determines more is needed. Some localities have also placed local restrictions on the annual, sexual reproducing bushy plant, which can grow to 15 tall and yield a pound of medical marijuana per year. Cities like Concord, CA., have banned outdoor growing, while places like Berkeley, CA. limits outdoor gardens to ten plants. NORML has a handy guide to local growing regulations.

Grow cannabis in the full sun, Jorge Cervantes argues

Grow cannabis in the full sun, Jorge Cervantes argues

GO OUTDOOR
Assuming your city or county allows it, grow outdoors, says Cervantes. “Growing outdoors is 100 percent easier than growing indoors. It’s much, much easier, it’s a lot cheaper and it leaves a very small carbon footprint, which is a huge factor.”

‘But isn’t outdoors risky?’ we asked. ‘Each plant could be worth a couple thousand dollars.’

“You just have to have a locked gate,” Cervantes said. The master farmer based in Spain has grown during three consecutive California summers. He also recommends trail cameras, and maybe a dog, and motion-detector activated security lights. Several companies also insure cannabis grows, he said.

Marijuana plants get stinky during their Fall Harvest, which can attract thieves or neighbor complaints.

“Some people, anything bothers them. I had an odor problem so on one side where the neighbors were I just put some carob seed mulch, which smells like chocolate and it sweetens up the air. The smell only lasts for a few weeks anyway.”

SEEDS OR CLONES?
“There are pluses and minuses for both of them,” he said.

Cuttings are readily available at dispensaries, and they’re real easy, he said. “It’s already a little plant and you don’t have to go through the first six weeks of growth.”

The problem is unsanitary cutting rooms, he said. Dirty clones contain hitchhikers like powdery mildew, or spider mite eggs. “It’s really difficult to tell if there’s a problem [with a cutting]. Buying cuttings is very related to trust,” he said.

Seek out dispensary reviews and determine the reputation of your clone’s source.

Seeds on the other hand, don’t contain such pathogens. Fungus may be on the surface of the seed, but hand washing or disinfecting before planting solves that problem. A good, first-generation hybrid seed will grow 20 percent faster and stronger than a clone, he said. Californians can still germinate from seed and get plants in the ground for this growing 2013 season, which runs April to October. “You’d have a very late crop,” he said.

Cannabis seeds sell online for about $50 for packs of five.

Cannabis seeds sell online for about $50 for packs of five.

Young marijuana plants grown from seed will need to be sexed, unless customers buy feminized seeds widely popular in Europe and available online.

“Pretty much everything is going to feminized seeds, and then auto-flowering is huge right now and has been for five years,” Cervantes said.

Auto-flowering marijuana plants automatically begin flowering after about ten weeks of growth. Natural marijuana needs the shorter daylight of the Fall to kick off flowering. Auto-flowering seeds can finish in mid-Summer, before neighbors even notice the odor.

“I would grow short plants and harvest in the middle of the Summer. Those auto-flowering plants are ready in 70-80 days and are just a meter tall,” he said.

WHICH SEEDS OR CLONES SHOULD I GET? THERE’S A BUNCH.
Cervantes said the most popular strain – OG Kush – can be finnicky to grow. “Jack’s Cleaner was a good one. Apollo 13. Chemdog. Blue Dream was really a nice one. And Jack Herer.”

SOIL OR HYDROPONIC MEDIUM?
Cervantes says keep it simple with organic soil and fertilizers, as opposed to soil-less “hydroponic” set-ups and synthetic, petroleum-based plant food called “nutrients”.

“Organic soil outdoors is much easier to deal with. You just have to keep it alive and growing well. It can take a couple of years to build it up,” he said. “But you can also buy it.”

Grow it in soil, advises Cervantes.

Grow it in soil, advises Cervantes.

Amend the organic soil with “activated, aerated compost tea. It’s concentrated compost that comes in a dry powder. That’s about it, and water. Also, a big ingredient is air. Pump air into the solution and the bacteria and microbes just explodes. You can go spread this in your garden and it’s dynamite.”

Avoid synthetic chemical nutrients, he said. A healthy organic soil should have nutrients, and nutrient levels are only part of it. “There’s a lot more biology in there, the whole rhizosphere, bacteria, microbes, a lot of fungus, good ones, bad ones, all the other soil life; a lot of worms, little and big beetles, larva, eggs, all kinds of stuff. They have to get in balance.”

Cannabis functions between 55 and 85 degree Fahrenheit, Cervantes notes.

Cannabis functions between 55 and 85 degree Fahrenheit, Cervantes notes.

SENSORS
Buy a gardening thermometer. Marijuana plants stop functioning above 85 degrees and below 55 degrees, Cervantes said. Keep the soil cool with mulch on top. “A layer of mulch works wonderfully and it’s really inexpensive.”

KEEP IT CLEAN
Decay breeds decay, Cervantes said. So make sure there’s no puddles of standing water – which can breed pests. Pick up any rotting debris in the yard.

“Just keep everything clean around the garden in general. Don’t let anything rot on the soil, remove debris and dead growth that is going to attract scavengers. A lot of insects will start on the dead stuff – crickets, beetles, fungus nats, earwigs – when the dead stuff runs out they start on the live things. The dead things also attracts fungus too.”

Marijuana-Horticulture LEARN MORE, BUT DON’T OVERDO IT
And by all means buy the well-reviewed and beloved “Marijuana Horticulture: The Indoor/Outdoor Medical Grower’s Bible”, but just remember:

“Ask ten gardeners how to grow marijuana and you get 20 opinions,” Cervantes said. “There’s a million ways to grow it. It’s a plant and it’s a survivor. It was here before we were and it’ll be here after we are gone.”

“The plant is really quite an easy plant to grow. It’s not hard to grow well, though there a lot of people that are trying too hard or they listen to a lot of different experts and usually get confused. Many times the experts have something to gain.”

Read up on more gardening tips here: ‘Growing Killer Weed: Ed Rosenthal’s Tips from ‘The Art of Doing

Or share some of your own lessons and resources in the comments.

Medical marijuana strain Blue Dream

Medical marijuana strain Blue Dream

Frugal gardening: Tips to save on the lawn and garden – Ottawa Citizen

OTTAWA — The first signs of spring have us all thinking of lush gardens and green grass.

While it’s easy to spend a fortune on plants, fertilizers, pots and a well-manicured lawn, your gardens shouldn’t be a sink hole for your hard-earned cash. Follow these tips to get beautiful results that won’t bury you in debt.

Join a horticultural society

Fran Dennett, volunteer with Master Gardeners of Ottawa-Carleton, says joining a horticultural society can help you save big on your plants. “At the (Ottawa-Carleton and Gloucester Horticultural Society), we always have plant sales,� she says. (See listings below).

Not only can you score plants at a fraction of the store cost, Dennett says you also receive the benefit of getting a mature plant that has been grown in the area, meaning it will be quicker to take to the soil and because they’ve been cared for by members of the horticultural society, they’re often in better shape than store-bought plants.

“A lot of plants that you buy in the big-box stores have been neglected. They’re shipped from some place not in Ottawa so already the TLC factor once they leave the greenhouse (is low),� says Dennett.

The Gloucester Horticultural Society also hosts yearly seed exchanges. You can also organize ask your own plant or seed exchanges with friends and neighbours.

Plant From seeds

Plants increase in price the larger they are. Starting from scratch can save you a bundle at the plant store. A package of 40 seeds costs between $1.50 and $3.

Recycle egg cartons and yogurt containers rather than buying expensive starter pots and focus on seeds that will give you the biggest bang for your buck.

Dennett recommends looking for annuals that have long blooming periods such as Alyssum, Calendula, Cosmos and Nasturtiums. Nasturtiums make great cut flowers and typically last into the early fall. “You can often use these to decorate your Thanksgiving table,� says Dennett.

Nasturtiums are also edible. Dennett puts them in her salads to add a peppery flavour and unlike other annuals, you can collect their seeds to plant the following year.

“Place them in a paper envelope, then the following year, soak them for 24 hours and plant them in moist soil,� she says.

Reduce your water bill

Neill Ritchie, owner of Ritchie Feed Seed, says adding mulch to flower beds and vegetable gardens can help reduce water consumption. “(Mulch) helps the soil to not dry out so fast, so you don’t have to water it as much,� says Ritchie.

Cedar mulch is a good option for flower gardens while plastic corn starch-based mulch sheets can be used in a vegetable garden. “It holds the moisture in longer and keeps the weeds out,� says Ritchie.

Installing a rain barrel in the backyard is another smart solution. (See rainbarrel.ca/sales to find a fundraising rain barrel sale in your area).

Don’t play brand favourites

Name-brand fertilizers may use cutting-edge technology, but Ritchie says house brands are just as effective and can make a big difference in your gardening budget. “If you steer away from any brand names, you’re going to save between 15 to 30 per cent (by buying) store-branded fertilizer,� he says.

Gardening tips for the area’s weird weather

Hummus made from colorful vegetables makes for fun eating

Hummus, a staple of Mediterranean cuisine, is traditionally made with chickpeas (garbanzo beans), olive oil, sesame seed paste, lemon and garlic. As the popularity of the dip spreads, so does the variety of recipes. Pinterest recently yielded recipes for orange sweet potato hummus, green lima bean hummus and even a hot-pink hummus made with roasted beets.

Saturday is Plant Sale Day

By Carol Stocker
This Saturday is the biggest day of the year for plant sales by garden clubs and plant societies. Rarities and bargains dug from thousands of local backyards are yours to seek out.

May 11, 8 a.m.-noon, The Milton Garden Club Perennial Plant Sale, in front of The Milton Library on Canton Ave.

May 11, 8 a.m.-noon, The Amateur Gardens of Milton Annual Plant Sale, in front of Milton Town Hall on Canton Ave.

May 11, 9-11 a.m., The Marblehead Garden Club’s 82nd annual plant sale, benefiting the Jeremial Lee Mansion, at the Gerry 5 VFA, 210 Beacon St., Marblehead.

May 11 9 a.m.-1 p.m.: Bilerica Garden Club Plant Sale, 25 Concord Road, Billerica.

May 11, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., The Garden Club of Concord Plant Sale, Middlesex Bank, Main St., Concord.

May 11, 10 am. to 1 p.m., Kingston Garden Club annuual spring plant sale, Faunce School, 16 Green St., Kingston.

May 11. 9 a.m. to noon, Bridgewater Garden Club Plant Sale, Bridgewater Cole-Yeaton Senior Center, 10 Wally Krueger Way, Bridgewater off Rte. 18/28.

May 11, 9 a.m.:Easton Garden Club Plant Sale, Yardley-Wood Rink, 388 Depot St., S. Easton

May 11 The New England Daylily Society [www.nedaylily.org] is holding a Plant Sale on in Wakefield at the First Parish Congregational Church, 1 Church St. Sales tables open: 10:30-12:30. Auction of more expensive daylily hybrids at 12:30.

Members of the New England Daylily Society will be there at the sale to answer your questions or help you to choose a daylily for your gardens. Hundreds of daylilies will be available for purchase. Be there at the start of the sale for best selection.

Daylilies are not Lilies or bulbs. They are herbaceous perennials. Daylilies grow very well in average garden soil and although they perform better when watered during the growing season, they are drought tolerant.

If you have questions about the sale, please contact NEDS president, Adele Keohan at akgabriel22@comcast.net
For more information about daylilies, visit the American Hemerocallis Society at www.daylilies.org.

Chelsea Flower show gossip

1. Prince Harry has been baking cakes for Sentabale in Maseru, Lesotho. Will he do the same at Chelsea Flower Show? No, but he will be there on 20 May. Also at the show will be Zara Phillips, cutting a cake for John Deere tractors’ 50th. And the Queen. Hazza effect made tix sell out/touts bump up prices quick.

2. Other Chelsea gossip. Hortus Loci and Crocus are friends again.  Tim Penrose from Bowden Hostas is possibly the biggest character in the marquee if you’re looking for someone who will chat. There aren’t many overseas trees in the show gardens, honest.  Ash are banned. James Wong was doing a show garden but now he isn’t.  Best bank background, East Village garden designer Marie Agius is daughter of Marcus Agius and grand daughter of Edmund de Rothschild. Judging: this year’s gardens will be judged again afterwards using the RHS’s new criteria-based system. Diarmuid won’t be there. He’s at Hampton Court. One Sunday environment hack has an interview lined up with Harry. There can’t be any good evening events on this year. I haven’t been invited to any anyway.

 

3. Chelsea odds:

Bradley Hole evens

Ulf 2/1

Balston 3/1

Myers 7/2

16/1 the rest

 

3.  Peter Seabrook’s autograph Ebay £5.99. Titchmarsh £24.99.  Monty Don £5.95. Charlie Dimmock 75p. Diarmuid Gavin £11.99, Joe Swift 99p

4. At Defra’s annual ministerial media reception. Owen Paterson, Richard Benyon, David Heath and Lord de Mauley were there along with a crowd of hacks and Defra PRs, plus some Borough Market-style Brit food purveyors.
After wading through pile of fag ends on Defra doorstep, much talk about a Brian May badger stunt outside Parly. No-one knew which badger was Brian. Radio 4 are no longer covering stunts where people dress as badgers, bees or foxes outside Parly. Doesn’t make good radio anyway.
OP gave a little speech on priorities, growing GB food, improving environment and his admiration for Australian-style stringent customs regimes after getting his boots washed there because they had Grand National mud on them.
He said he’d had to split up Polish and Hungarian enviro ministers who were arguing about bees and that he’d got hundreds of thousands of anti-gvt neonicotinoid emails. Defra is strong sticking to its guns in face of public opinion about bees, badgers, foxes.
How this event works: Low grade hacks try and make friends with higher up ones. Broadcast hacks pal up with PRs and ministers. Defra PRs v smiley -hope this means they will flag up report dates in the future.

5. TV star Michael Barrymore is working up to three days a week at a Tomlins garden centre in Brentwood, Essex. He says: “I don’t get paid for it. I help out because I enjoy gardening.”

6. Scotch osprey has ousted a Lake District one/ cruelty to badgers ‘almost doubles’ ahead of cull

7.  Superb Monty interview as he goes French on us.

8. Unacceptable. 

Plans to drop climate change from curriculum ‘unacceptable’ Guardian.
Sky News Australia Perth pitch invasions ‘unacceptable’ says Sanzar boss
New Zealand Herald-”From our point of view it’s extremely disappointing and unacceptable behaviour from a small group of idiots in what was otherwise a very good …John Kerry: ‘North Korea’s rhetoric is simply unacceptable’
Telegraph.co.uk He reiterated that North Korea “will not be accepted as a nuclear power,” and called the country’s bellicose rhetoric “simply unacceptable”. Five years’ jail for her life is unacceptable, says brother of woman …
Evening Standard

9. Bees by me:

Bill Oddie calls Owen Paterson a c**t

Harry and Chelsea

Monty and snooker

10. A busy Mont Don has also replied to an article I wrote for thinkinggardens

Mont said: “Monty Don:
I hesitate to dip my toe in these waters but for what it is worth, here is my pennyworth.
A number of points: Television, high-paying journalism, big name designers et al are all driven almost entirely by commercial pressures. Numbers rule. So if you earn your living in the gardening media – as I and a number of people posting here do – then you are pretty much forced to go with the numbers to earn your living. He who pays the piper calls the tune.
Matthew and any other horticultural journalist would give their eye-teeth to get a highly paid gardening column – even if it meant simplifying and repeating those simplicities. Most garden readers and viewers are decent people wanting information and entertainment. They are, in some form, paying for that and you, writer or broadcaster, have to respect that.
Having been a horticultural hack for 25 years and written for every newspaper and most gardening mags I know that I would rather be read by three million people every week than speak to 300 like-minded souls. Television is a mass medium. Always has been. The more people you reach, the better. This does not necessarily mean you have to dumb down but certainly means there is always a pressure to. I think there is a compromise which is to try and simplify things and to inspire. Then people can move on and up.
Books are the medium in which one can truly express yourself – as Anne and others here have notably done. But gardening books sell tiny numbers compared to cooking for example. The great danger – as with the entire horticultural world – is that like speaks enthusiastically to like, everyone gets terribly pleased with themselves and their world draws a little tighter around them.
In the end the real pleasure is the doing. Almost everything interesting about technical gardening has already been said. I would much rather just garden at home than write or film about about it but if one has to go to work it is a pretty damn good way of doing it. So the best thing that one can possibly do as a writer or broadcaster is to enthuse and inspire others to actually go out and do it so they too can experience that satisfaction.
Er, that’s it.
Monty Don  writer and broadcaster.
I’d say: “Garden writing is getting a lot better since I started getting published more in the nationals.” That will probably be the last time I am.

11. Spotted: Natalie Cassidy, Warwick Davies at London aquarium.  Gambo at Oxford circus. Warren Gatland in Cardiff.

12. Have you ever watched? anns a gharadh alba-scottish gardening tv gaelic

13. Top selling gardening book: Titch? No Monty? No. Container Gardening by Richard Jackson.4,461. Between Miranda Hart and Jamie Bulger in Nielsen non-fiction charts.  I’ve got a gardening book out in November btw. I’ll be happy with 4k sales.
14. New series of Superscrimpers is now on Channel 4. Martyn Cox is dishing out my money saving gardening tips across the ten week show. Brown sauce to clean secateurs is my favourite.

15. 481k people visted RHS shows last year, 70 pc women
87 pc abc1 17hrs tv, 1,350 press cuttings, 5000 tweets, 104 hrs radio
59 pc over 55.

16. Garsons Farm in Esher featured recently with Katie picking a carrot for CBeebies ‘I Can Cook’.

17.  This guy wants waiter service at Dobbies.

18. Butterflies’ actress Wendy Craig opened Trent Valley Garden Centre (Stephen Smith’s), Doncaster Road on the outskirts of Scunthorpe on August 17, 1985. Do you remember her visit? What are your memories of the day? Leave your comments here.

19. The inimitable Soilman.

20. The Sun gardening domain name was recently bought for £30.

21. Nigel Slater now refers to Dan Pearson as his gardener. Since The Sun launched its Sunday edition it has never carried any gardening editorial, offer or advert.

22. Graham Paskett novel: www.findosmousetrap.co.uk

23. Spoke to Hessayon the other day. He’d sent me a letter. He said the sales of 16m refer just to books on houseplants and cut flowers. ‘the total number of Experts out there is over 53 million, ‘kindest regards Dave’.

24. Great and the good were at RHS Lindley Hall for launch AGMs. Roy Lancaster, Seabrook and lots of plantsmen. Twiglets on menu. I heard that TM had lost the pumpkin seed they paid record sums for. So rang them the next day. They said it was lost. At end of the day they rang back to say they’d found it. Also at the RHS awards recently in London. .

25. Heritage garden and garden show music is getting better, while numbers fell last year. Chelsea has Brian Eno doing the music for Jinny Blom/Prince Harry. British Sea Power played there once. At Cardiff a Steve Miller type band was playing, who might turn up at Hampton Court.

26. Blue Peter gardener Chris Collins is celebrating a decade at the children’s show by launching a children’s range called Seedlets.
The seeds, tools, watering cans, bags and wildlife houses come in beginner, intermediate and expert levels and are being marketed by LiteBulb Group and sold by King’s Seeds representatives into garden centres.
Collins launched the range at the Toy Fair at Olympia in London. He has ideas for more TV series through Alchemy TV such as 20 strangest plants and ‘River Cottage in the City’, saying: “It’s all very well millionaires doing it in country cottages”. He is also working with catering company ISS on School Food Matters, a project about growing your own in small playgrounds.
He has an RHS book, Grow Your Own for Kids out, and says: “I’ve never had a kid wobble on me. Every kid I’ve worked with gets engaged in gardening because it’s in our blood. We’ve been gardeners for thousands of years but it’s only in the last two decades we’ve been relying into supermarkets.”

27. Waitrose and Middle England middle of the road fave Titch collide in a trolley full of pleasant shopping, reliably-sourced food and the friendly face of afternoon light TV chat, Chelsea Flower Show and the occasional obsequious royal documentary. Waitrose is getting round the issue of BBC and commercial clashes (Titch will unveil new gardening ranges for Waitrose this month) through a “black out period” where he will not appear in Waitrose TV ads and promotions immediately before, during and after Chelsea Flower Show. He ran into a bit of flak when he fronted BQ for three years, because BBC guidelines don’t allow its presenters to commercially promote their field of expertise. Percy Thrower and Diarmuid Gavin fell foul of this and the BBC dropped them but AT has always managed to negotiate contracts to avoid the commercial conflict issue.
Titch is promoting Waitrose’s ‘commitment to British agriculture and horticulture’. He’s about helping British farmers, post-horsemeat crisis: “There is a real need to promote a greater understanding of just what is involved in producing healthy, well-grown produce and transporting it from field to fork so that it arrives with the consumer in the best possible condition.” So while gardening isn’t about gardening, it’s about shopping, supermarkets have gone the other way. They aren’t about groceries. They’re about farming. But most gardeners think they’re urban farmers now.

28. The wonders of twitter:
Defra UK @DefraGovUK
17h

Hi, this is David Heath. Really pleased to be taking part in today’s #loveourforests tweet-a-thon. Send me your questions!
View details •

matthew appleby @mattapple1

@DefraGovUK hi, what’s going to be in chalara action plan? quarantine zones? any hope for uk ash? will defra aim to save heritage ash? how?
No answer. Defra press office: “He got lots of questions.”

"Dark Garden" at Fuller

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Yates offers May gardening tips


Posted: Wednesday, May 8, 2013 8:44 am


Yates offers May gardening tips

By Dianna F. Dandridge
Staff writer

Sequoyah County Times

Even though spring is taking its time making a real appearance, there are many things the home gardener should schedule into their routine.


Tony Yates, Sequoyah County Agriculture Extension Agent recently offered some timely tips to keep the lawns and gardens at their best.

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Wednesday, May 8, 2013 8:44 am.

Organic Garden Manure Sale May 11

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Top gardening tips on how to grow healthy plants while saving water



A sunflower

Tuesday, May 7, 2013
12:59 PM

WITH summer hopefully just around the corner, gardeners will be digging in and planning what to grow for the year ahead.

Affinity Water is offering tips to help you get your gardens in shape to grow healthy plants, while saving money by avoiding unnecessary over watering.

Mike Pocock, water resources manager, said: ”Following the heavy rainfall over the last year, groundwater levels in our chalk aquifers are above average and we do not anticipate any restrictions for 2013.

“However we continue to ask our customers to use water wisely. Not only is this good for the environment, but it will also save them energy and money.

“It’s important to choose plants that thrive in dry conditions, such as lavender, marigolds and cornflowers so look for the full sun symbol on the plant labels when buying new plants as this indicates their tolerance to dry conditions. Try to make the most of moisture by adding a layer of tree bark, gravel or compost to keep the sun off the soil; this will help retain the moisture in the soil.”

Here’s some more of Affinity Water’s top tips to help you become a water efficient gardener:

• Move containers, hanging baskets and pots into shady areas where possible

• Reset your lawn mower blades to 4cm to encourage dense bushy growth, which traps early morning dew and reduces evaporation

• Water your pots and hanging baskets either early in the morning or during the evening to reduce evaporation in the midday sun.

• A water butt is a great way to make the most of rain water, and using one will also save you money if you are a metered customer.

• When you are watering try use a watering can filled from a water butt.

• If you’re potting up or planting containers, use ones made from plastic, glazed terracotta or wood. These tend to lose less water than bare terracotta.

• When potting up your planters use a small amount of gel crystals. They absorb water and can help retain the moisture in the soil.

• Bury a short length of pipe into your pot; if you water into the tube the water goes directly to the roots where the plant needs it most.

• Use mulches like bark chips or gravel to retain moisture and keep weeds down.

For more water efficiency advice and discounted products, go to affinitywater.co.uk/savewater


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    The Benefits of Organic Gardening

    All gardens benefit from compost — and preferably you can make your own on site. Hey, it’s free! Compost feeds plants, helps conserve water, cuts down on weeds, and keeps food and yard waste out of landfills (where it produces methane), instead turning garbage into “black gold.” Spread compost around plants, mix with potting soil, use to bolster struggling plants…it’s hard to use too much!

    According to Country Living, the best compost forms from the right ratio of nitrogen- and carbon-rich organic waste, mixed with soil, water and air. It might sound like complicated chemistry, but don’t worry too much if you don’t have time to make perfect compost. Even a minimally tended pile will still yield decent results.

    1. To get started, measure out a space at least three feet square. Your compost heap can be a simple pile or contained within a custom pen or bin (some can be rotated, to improve results).

    2. Add alternating layers of carbon (or brown) material — leaves and garden trimmings — and nitrogen (or green) material — such as kitchen scraps and manure, with a thin layer of soil in between.

    3. Top off the pile with four to six inches of soil. Turn the pile as new layers are added and water to keep (barely) moist, in order to foster microbe action. You should get good compost in as little as two months (longer if it’s cold).

    4. A properly maintained compost pile shouldn’t smell. But if it does add more dry carbon material (leaves, straw, or sawdust) and turn it more frequently.

    5. Even if you live in a city, you can do some composting under your counter with a tidy worm kit, or partner with a community garden.