Organic Gardening Corn

I live in Phx, AZ and I just planted red corn in a Small Garden that type of fertilizer do I need?
I have miracle grow garden soil and want to use one that some organic fertilizers.
Depends on your soil. I live in SoCal and we have a very sandy soil. I suggest going to a garden shop Lowes or Home Depot, etc. and get Garden Compost and topsoil. Mix the fertilizer and soil with natural soil in your backyard. I use a brand called SuperSoil and mix it with bone meal and blood meal. Good luck
Vegetable Garden – Fertilizing – Tilling – Planting
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Food Storage Vegetable Garden Seed Kit-1.4 Lbs of Emergency Survival Gardening Seeds-16 Types of Non-Hybrid, Open-Pollinated Seeds $47.95 Perfect Addition To Any Emergency Food Supply Add the canned garden seed assortment to any emergency food supply to insure the ability to start a garden to add fresh grown vegetables. There is enough seed here to grow several huge gardens, or to plant for several years, or to provide enough seed for all your neighbors. The can literally contains thousands of seeds. The seeds in this survival se… |
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EarthBox 1010002 Garden Kit, Terra Cotta $32.25 Includes container, aeration screen, casters, fill tube, 2 b/w mulch covers, 1 red mulch cover, fertilizer, dolomiteSelf Watering 3 gallon reservoir w/ overflow hole prevents over/under wateringcasters for mobilityaeration screen prevents root rotBonus Red Mulch Cover include for tomato growingMade with UV-Stabilized, Food-Grade 100% recycleable plastic in the USA… |
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Scotts 46304 29-Pound Organic Choice Lawn Food $21.40 Scotts, 4M, Organic Choice Lawn Food, Builds A Thick Green Lawn, Safe To Walk On Lawn Immediately After Application, Apply Anytime On Any Grass Type, All Protein Ingredients, No Manure Smell, Guaranteed…. |
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Easy Gardener 1623 WeedBlock Natural Landscape Fabric – 40-Inch x 36-Foot $10.77 Landscape fabric made of polymer and PLA, an all natural polymer substitute made of corn. Stops weeds for years. Won’t harm plants and lets air and water penetrate. Roll is 40” x 36′…. |
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Blue Potatoes, Orange Tomatoes $7.95 Tomatoes are red, corn is yellow, and string beans are green. Or are they? Actually, lots of familiar foods grow in a rainbow of surprising colors. Image trying orange tomatoe, red popping corn, or purple string beans for a change. This lively introduction to the joys of organic gardening covers everything you need to know in order to grow a cornucopia of fruits and vegetables in unexpected colors. The first section includes details on: -planning your rainbow garden and ordering seeds -preparing the soil and planting -feeding, watering, and weeding -dealing with garden pests without using poison The second section provides detailed instructions for growing eight different rainbow crops, including: -which varieties to order -when and how to plant -which garden pests to watch out for -the best time to harvest -how to serve and enjoy This book will not only promote the delight in growing plants but enhance the wonder in the natural world right in your own backyard. . . . Will make you want to start a garden today. –Appraisal |
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Complete Vegetable and Herb Gardener: A Guide to Growing Your Garden Organically (Burpee American Gardening Series) $39.95 This information-packed reference contains everything a gardener needs to know to produce bumper crops of succulent tomatoes, spicy peppers, melt-in-your-mouth lettuce, and fragrant, flavorful herbs. Whether you are a first-time gardener or a seasoned expert, you will find clear, knowledgeable answers to all your vegetable- and herb-growing questions.Over 280 full-color photographs and 30 line drawings make this essential reference as beautiful as it is useful. Easy-reference charts put a wealth of information at your fingertips, including the amount of water each crop requires for best growth, application rates of common organic fertilizers, and first-and-last frost dates for locations across the country.Part One, Vegetable Gardening from the Ground Up, contains the information gardeners need to plan, plant, and care for a healthy, bountiful, all-organic garden. Topics covered include how to select a suitable garden site, what tools make gardening easier and more rewarding–and how to fill your tool shed with an arsenal of sturdy tools that will last a lifetime–plus how to make compost and transform any soil into fertile "fat earth." Chapters on laying out and planting the garden include details on how to use space-saving, harvest-enhancing techniques such as intercropping, succession cropping, and trellising, and also cover how to determine planting dates and extend the season. Care through the season–including mulching, watering, midseason, planting, and harvesting–as well as pest and disease control are also covered.Part Two, Plant Portraits, features descriptions of over 100 plants, including information on growing hundreds of herbs and vegetables–from common to exotic. Entries on popular crops such as tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, beans, and lettuce are accompanied by information on unusual, yet easy-to-grow, edibles such as bok choy, corn salad, New Zealand spinach, salad burnet, and shallots. These portraits |
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Gardening in Iowa and Surrounding Areas $0.22 On the East Coast, so the story goes, newcomers are asked where they come from; on the West Coast they are asked what they do for a living; in Iowa people ask them, “How’s your garden doing?” Maybe this is not a true story, but it does epitomize the importance of gardening for Iowans, blessed as they are with the rich glacial soil so hospitable to corn and soybeans. Rural and urban Iowans alike start planning next summer’s garden in midwinter, when their plots are still snow-covered and deep-frozen; by state fair time their trees, shrubs, vegetables—including the ubiquitous zucchini—and flowers are thriving. Veronica Fowler’s month-by-month guide to gardening in Iowa is a concise, valuable resource for all novice and experienced gardeners.Beginning in January, Fowler presents a monthly checklist to allow gardeners to prioritize seasonal tasks. Her winter chapters focus on garden design, cold-weather gardening, and starting plants from seeds; in spring she moves into soil preparation, shopping for plants, wildflower and rose cultivation, and lawn care basics; summer brings landscaping, flowers for cutting, and organic gardening; and fall involves cold frames, winter-harvest vegetables, forcing bulbs and perennials, trees and shrubs, and ground covers and vines best suited for Iowa’s climate as well as information on mail-order suppliers, gardens to visit, where to go for help, and garden club memberships. Tips from some of the more than two thousand members of the Federated Garden Clubs of Iowa round out this plentiful harvest of useful advice.On a day in February when the wind chill is, well, chilling and the forecast calls for more of the same, the arrival of the first garden catalog of the season brings warmth to any gardener. Veronica Fowler’s accessible, information-packed book will become part of every gardener’s life both indoors and out. |
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Organic Gardening for Beginners $0.99 9+~~AppWarrior~~NAY MIN THU~~http://itunes.apple.com/app/organic-gardening-for-beginners/id388920578?uo=5~~AppWarrior~~1.0~~2929214~~432437~~http://appwarrior.com~~http://appwarrior.com/contact |