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Fast Spring Gardening

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By Patty Inglish, MS

Deserts Cover Over 1/7 of Earth and are Spreading



Stop the Deserts!

Sustainability as a worldwide initiative to save money, increase efficiency, and even save the planet has become a byword and buzz word of the 2000s. In order for the third and fourth generations into the future to have a place to live, the current generation must lay the groundwork, so to speak, for sustaining the Earth by reducing especially the erosion that is widening our planet’s desert regions.

Every time a tree is cut down for timber or to clear the way for a building, path, road, or railway anywhere near a desert region, that desert can spread. When the devastation and removal of trees reaches a particular threshold globally, then oxygen will begin to escape from the earth at the same time CO2 levels are increasing, and O2 will no longer be held fast to the Earth by our plants and trees. They will still create it at night but in smaller quantities, and it will drift away.

For years already in 2009, sands and dust from the Gobi Desert in Asia has stung the eyes of Californians across the Pacific Ocean. The deserts are becoming larger.

Whether factions believe global warming exists or is even manmade, the deserts are still expanding, as evidenced by NASA satellite photography. This is irrefutable. Global warming may be taking ice from the poles and northern shoreline pack ice and dumping it in the lower or more central latitudes as snowmelt and flood rains, which also increase the erosion of soil and plant life. Deserts are already expanding in Southwest America and new ones may appear in South America and other parts of the US as well.

If climate change does nothing else, it will continue to increase the size of deserts, reduce the quantities of plant and tree life on Earth, and eventually suck the Oxygen off the planet. We can help prevent this by planting gardens, even if we feel that we do not have enough time to do so.


The Gobi Desert

If we do not plant more, America can look like this.
If we do not plant more, America can look like this.

Quick Tips

Early and late spring gardeners can cultivate a summer garden in many climates. Bedding plants can be a key to their gardening success in minimal time. Tomatoes and flowers take planning or they will die, but shortcuts and easy tips are available.

Nurseries, seed companies, and catalogue sales companies are great for the time-challenged gardener that needs quick solutions and ready-made gardens. Books are readily available that offer weekend gardening projects that can be completed in a day. A little thinking and a small book can give you vegetables and flowers the first summer you have your garden.

Bedding plants are transplantable seedlings started indoors and can be purchase at the local garden center early in spring. Many mail-order companies also offer bedding plants already started or in small biodegradable contianers that can be planted in the ground after youstart the seedlings indoors. Some companies have called these starters "Sure Starts" or "Quick Starts".

For example, Psychotria nervosa orWild Coffee is a native bedding plant of Florida. it is a short shrub that can grow up to 4 and even as high as 10 feet, so it needs trimming. It also spreads out 4-8 feet, so it would not take many to provide ground cover for a small garden plot in Florida.

Mulch for retaining moisture for your new plants may be easier to find than you think. If you have a lawn to mow or leaves to rake, the grass clippings and leaves can be used for mulch in a small plot around the plant roots. If youhave no grass or leaves, perhaps a neighbor will let you collect theirs.

The American Southwest


Spring Hill Nurseries at Amazon.com

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Spring Hill Nurseries Gardens Order in the Spring

Fast Growing Sun Garden. 16 perennials and a plan-o-gram for planting. 60 sq. ft.
Fast Growing Sun Garden. 16 perennials and a plan-o-gram for planting. 60 sq. ft.

Buy Plants That Work

Native plants that are originally from your own state will grow better than something ornamental that thrives only in Southeast Asia. Native grasses are some of these and you may be able to find native flowers and vegetable varieties that thrive especially well in your area. Native plants help to rebuild your own state and city ecosystem as well as being easier to grow.

Professional Help - All America Selections at http://www.all-americaselections.org/ offers information about plants that by their own motto are Tested Nationally and Proven Locally®. New and improved varieties of vegetables and flowers are promtoed every year on the site with an AAS Winners List.

The plants throughout the site are a variety of healthy specimens that thrive all over America, being native or indigenous to specific regions of the nation. As of 2009, the company has been in business for 75 years. Visit their site and they can help you pick out plants that will grow well and quickly in your area of the country, The site also lists trusted garden centers by state.

Anopther example of professional help is that available from your local County Extension Service in your state. These agencies areoften conencted with the local state universities or colleges and provide web sites full of useful information.

Pre-Packed Gardens - Some maufacturers pack envelopes of seeds together of different plants that grow well together and complement one another. These packs can be vegetable, flower, or combination packs. Other manufacturers prepare seeds in long strips of mateiral that can be laid right down into a shallow ditch in a small garden, covered with soil, and watered all at once.

Spring Hill Nurseries is very well known and is located in Tipp City, Ohio near Dayton. They have a trio of great pre-panned gardens for those that have little time for preparation and planning. See photos to the right, all from Spring Hill Nurseries and aviable in the spring form the website and from Amazon.com. Ready made garden kits range in price from about $15 - $150 and require little time. In addition, perennials will often return the following year on their own.


Container Gardens

(public domain)
(public domain)

Fast Vegetables

 These entries often grow very well, quickly, without tedious care:

  • Beans, squash, radishes and lettuce sown into the ground via seed and are very successful.
  • Tomatoes and peppers are usually easy, but purchase seedling plants for fastest results and best success.
  • Bush-type varieties of beans and tomatoes do not need stakes or cages because they sread out along the ground.
  • Containers can be used for any of these plants and kept on the patio for a small garden. Containers can stand or be hung.

Japanese Gardens

(public domain)
(public domain)

Hearing on Desertification


Fast Gardening News

  • Spring Garden's winners end year with tough lossThe Piedmont Journal2 days ago

    Seasons end. Careers end with them. Spring Garden's 14-13 loss at Gaston Friday in the second round of the Class 1A playoffs was the final high school football game for five Panthers — T.J. Brittain, Trey Littlefield, Kaleb Littlejohn, Jake Scott and Casey Steward.

  • Spring Garden boys get two solid victoriesThe Piedmont Journal2 days ago

    The Spring Garden boys enter this week's games coming off solid wins over Gaylesville, 71-36, and Gordon Central of Georgia, 69-54, last week. The Gordon Central game, at Spring Garden Saturday, was a back-and-forth affair.

  • Norwood Community GardenThe Norwood Post15 hours ago

    Norwood Community Garden volunteers got ahead of the storm and laid water pipe last week. The NCG board is hopeful for spring planting, but the garden (behind the backhoe) still needs some material donations, and lots of volunteer time.

  • No. 7 Gaston tops No. 2 Spring Garden; prep sports roundupThe Gadsden Times3 days ago

    Times Staff Reports SPRING GARDEN — No. 7 Gaston got 15 points from Morgan Beaird and 11 from Lauren Lowrey in knocking off No. 2 Spring Garden 46-39 Tuesday in a Class 1A, Area 12 contest. Lori Paglione added eight points and 10 rebounds for Gaston (2-2), who will host Gaylesville on Friday in another area game.

Desert Music

Animals Are Beautiful People Animals Are Beautiful People
Price: $5.79
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Andrea Bocelli - Under the Desert Sky [CD Included] Andrea Bocelli - Under the Desert Sky [CD Included]
Price: $18.09
List Price: $24.98
Andrea Bocelli: Under the Desert Sky Andrea Bocelli: Under the Desert Sky
Price: $10.94
List Price: $14.98
Andrea Bocelli: Under the Desert Sky [DVD Included] Andrea Bocelli: Under the Desert Sky [DVD Included]
Price: $12.75
List Price: $24.98
My Christmas: Deluxe Edition (with Bonus DVD) My Christmas: Deluxe Edition (with Bonus DVD)
Price: $18.93
Silk Road Journeys: When Strangers Meet Silk Road Journeys: When Strangers Meet
Price: $7.44
List Price: $11.96
Mario Lanza Sings Songs From The Student Prince & The Desert Song / Romberg Mario Lanza Sings Songs From The Student Prince & The Desert Song / Romberg
Price: $6.83
List Price: $8.99
The Mario Lanza Collection (3CD) The Mario Lanza Collection (3CD)
Price: $18.97
List Price: $29.98
This Desert Life This Desert Life
Price: $4.50
List Price: $9.98
Hero Hero
Price: $7.00
List Price: $9.99

Comments

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Netters profile image

Netters  says:
9 months ago

A real eye opener. I live in the desert in New Mexico but people still plant trees and shrubs. It's kinda weird, while driving through the state, you can tell where there's a town because it will look like an oasis with trees. The rest of the countryside is flat and sandy. Great hub!

k@ri profile image

k@ri  says:
9 months ago

That's an eye opening video! I think I will plant some container plants this year!

Did you read this hub by Direxmd?

http://hubpages.com/_1aim5r84wrsm8/hub/Turning-Was

It was another good one along this same line...but focusing on water conservation. It would seem these two go hand in hand.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
9 months ago

Hi my good friend, Netters! -- I think I want to live in New Mexico in the future. At least will visit the particular deserts - I want to see what it feels like.

kari! - Thanks for the link! I became interested in all this in the late 1980s after trips to Nevada. Conservation has been a big interest for me sine then. Glad you visited my Hub.

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