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Square Foot Gardening.

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Presentation on theme: "Square Foot Gardening."— Presentation transcript:

1 Square Foot Gardening

2 What Could Be Easier Than This?
Build A Box Fill With Mel's Mix Build A Grid

3 Plant your seeds and let if grow!

4 The Ten Basics of Square Foot Gardening:
1 - LAYOUT Arrange you garden in squares, not rows. Lay it out in 4' by 4' areas. 2 - BOXES Build boxes to hold a new soil mix above ground. 3 - AISLES Space boxes 3’ apart to form walking aisles. 4 - SOIL Fill boxes with Mel’s special soil mix: 1/3 compost. 1/3 peat moss, and 1/3 coarse vermiculite. 5 - GRID Make a square foot grid for the top of each box. A MUST! 6 - CARE NEVER WALK ON YOUR GROWING SOIL. Tend your garden from the aisles. 7 - SELECT Plant a different flower, vegetable, or herb crop in each square foot, using 1, 4, 9, or 16 plants per square foot. 8 - PLANT Conserve seeds. Plant only a pinch (2 or 3 seeds) per hole. Place transplants in a slight saucer-shaped depression. 9 - WATER Water by hand from a bucket of sun-warmed water. 10 - HARVEST When you finish harvesting a square foot, add compost and replant it with a new and different crop

5 Location: Pick an area that gets 6-8 hours of sunshine daily.
Stay clear of trees and shrubs where roots and shade may interfere.  Have it close to the house for convenience and protection.  Existing soil is not really important. You won’t be using it.  Area must not puddle after a heavy rain. 

6 How does eating locally help the environment?

7 Locally Grown Food Tastes Better
Farmers can grow and harvest crops to ensure peak qualities of; Freshness Nutrition Taste

8 Eating locally grown food is better for your health
Even when not organic, small farms tend to use less chemicals. They usually grow more of a variety. This protects biodiversity and preserving a wider agricultural gene pool. An important factor in long term food security.

9 Reduces Global warming
On average the fresh food items on your table travel 1,500 miles to get there. Buying locally produced food eliminated the need for all that fuel-guzzling transportation.

10 Helps the economy On average farmers receive only 20 cents of every dollar spent for the food they produce. The rest goes to; Transportation Processing Packaging Refrigeration Marketing

11 continued Farmers who sell food to local customers “receive the full retail value,” Eating locally also encourages the use of local farmland for farming Thus keeping development in check while preserving open space

12 Want to do more? Take the “Eat Local Challenge” at www.eatlocal.net
Or find locally grown food near you at

13 Sources


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