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Sunday, May 1, 2011

You Don't Need a Green Thumb

Most successful gardeners don't have a green thumb, literally or figuratively. Many people have commented on my "obvious" emerald appendage when seeing my gardens or photos of my gardens. It's not false humility when I diplomatically decline the compliment. It's a realistic assessment and I'm being honest when I reply that they could do it too.

A successful garden

Successful gardening isn't about genetics, or luck, or innate talent. Successful gardening is about knowledge, effort, and perseverance.

I've killed many, many plants over the years. The large majority were unintentional. If I truly had a green thumb there wouldn't be so many vegetative ghosts in my garden. The deaths were caused primarily by my lack of information, lack of work, or lack of patience.

Even after months of study and tests to become a master gardener I still occasionally make mistakes and my plants suffer for it. To my credit, I've had many successes since I learned about what it takes to grow plants properly. Since becoming knowledgeable about gardening, the death rate in my garden has declined dramatically.

The basics growing plants are simple. Garden plants need soil, light, water, air, and nutrients. How strong they grow is determined by the quality of each of those components. Water and fertilizer in abundance won't help a plant in bad soil, just as they won't help a plant living in darkness. Perfect soil is useless without water, air, and sun. Successful gardening happens when the gardener is able to provide the correct balance.

Left to themselves, most garden plants would perish. Native plants in every region have adapted to survive without any intervention by man, but few plants in a typical garden are native. Your plants need your assistance. If you supply them with the aid they require, they'll reward you and themselves with sustained growth, flowers, and fruit. Pay too little attention or effort and they'll suffer.

Those are the first two components of successful gardening: knowledge and effort. You have complete control over gaining the information you need to garden in your area and spending the time to make it happen. Selecting the correct plant, putting it in the correct location, and giving it the correct attention happens because you find out about the specific needs and then make it happen.

The successful garden five years before

Even when you seem to do everything right, you still may not have gardening success. That's where perseverance comes in. It's the old axiom about try, try again. Successful gardeners identify deficiencies and overcome obstacles. If a plant fails one year, it doesn't mean it will fail the next. Abundant harvest one season does not guarantee abundance the next. It's all about keeping at it, gardening for the enjoyment of gardening.

That's all there is to it. Successful gardening is simple. Not easy, but simple. I'm still learning new things about gardening so that I can continue to have success with it. I spend time planting, fertilizing, weeding, harvesting, and propagating. I try new things. And I keep at it even when things don't turn out as planned. Gardening always offers new challenges. That's one of the reasons I love it.
Most successful gardeners don't have a green thumb, literally or figuratively. Many people have commented on my "obvious" emerald appendage when seeing my gardens or photos of my gardens. It's not false humility when I diplomatically decline the compliment. It's a realistic assessment and I'm being honest when I reply that they could do it too.

A successful garden

Successful gardening isn't about genetics, or luck, or innate talent. Successful gardening is about knowledge, effort, and perseverance.

I've killed many, many plants over the years. The large majority were unintentional. If I truly had a green thumb there wouldn't be so many vegetative ghosts in my garden. The deaths were caused primarily by my lack of information, lack of work, or lack of patience.

Even after months of study and tests to become a master gardener I still occasionally make mistakes and my plants suffer for it. To my credit, I've had many successes since I learned about what it takes to grow plants properly. Since becoming knowledgeable about gardening, the death rate in my garden has declined dramatically.

The basics growing plants are simple. Garden plants need soil, light, water, air, and nutrients. How strong they grow is determined by the quality of each of those components. Water and fertilizer in abundance won't help a plant in bad soil, just as they won't help a plant living in darkness. Perfect soil is useless without water, air, and sun. Successful gardening happens when the gardener is able to provide the correct balance.

Left to themselves, most garden plants would perish. Native plants in every region have adapted to survive without any intervention by man, but few plants in a typical garden are native. Your plants need your assistance. If you supply them with the aid they require, they'll reward you and themselves with sustained growth, flowers, and fruit. Pay too little attention or effort and they'll suffer.

Those are the first two components of successful gardening: knowledge and effort. You have complete control over gaining the information you need to garden in your area and spending the time to make it happen. Selecting the correct plant, putting it in the correct location, and giving it the correct attention happens because you find out about the specific needs and then make it happen.

The successful garden five years before

Even when you seem to do everything right, you still may not have gardening success. That's where perseverance comes in. It's the old axiom about try, try again. Successful gardeners identify deficiencies and overcome obstacles. If a plant fails one year, it doesn't mean it will fail the next. Abundant harvest one season does not guarantee abundance the next. It's all about keeping at it, gardening for the enjoyment of gardening.

That's all there is to it. Successful gardening is simple. Not easy, but simple. I'm still learning new things about gardening so that I can continue to have success with it. I spend time planting, fertilizing, weeding, harvesting, and propagating. I try new things. And I keep at it even when things don't turn out as planned. Gardening always offers new challenges. That's one of the reasons I love it.

2 comments:

  1. I think I might beat your title of being the worst Gardener ever…but I still really want to do some gardening with the kids. Thanks for this post…from one black thumb to another.

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  2. Thanks. Gardening with kids is a great opportunity to mentor a new generation. I've had the privilege of helping establish gardens at two different schools. With a little guidance, the kids did the digging, planting, and irrigating. We all felt a great sense of accomplishment.

    ReplyDelete