Gardener: Ten Steps to a 30-minute garden

Published: Monday, Nov. 9, 2009 10:56 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

As we invent things to make our lives more efficient, the net result is often more things on our to-do list and a greater sense of pressure to get them all done! Let's face it; some of the hottest-selling products and concepts today are all about saving time.

The popularity of gardening has even taken a hit, as we find more and more competition for what would have been time spent in the garden. But whatever the reason, if 30 minutes is all you have to spend each week, here's my list for 10 ways to minimize your time while creating a beautiful, lower-maintenance yard and garden.

Mulch

For the little bit of time it takes to spread mulch throughout your garden beds, the return on your efforts is huge! A 3-inch layer works wonders, and drastically reduces weeds that need sunlight to germinate. The insulating barrier provided by mulch helps retain moisture in the soil, reducing watering time and keeping soil temperatures more even, for happier plants. Mulch even cuts down on plant diseases that would otherwise splash up onto foliage from the soil.

Compost

Nature's fertilizer is free and effortless to make at home from yard debris and kitchen scraps. But once you spread about a 1/2-inch layer around your plants and on your lawn, billions of beneficial microorganisms begin working to improve soil quality naturally. A little goes a long way!

Story continues below

Mow high

When mowing your lawn, cutting the grass at the highest preferred setting will help lawns shade and choke out weeds that compete for sunlight. Higher top growth also promotes deeper roots and a more drought-tolerant lawn.

'Grasscycle'

Why spend time bagging your grass clippings, when allowing them to return back into the soil provides vital organic matter and reduces nitrogen needs by 30 percent. The grass clippings leave no unsightly mess, and don't promote weed growth or thatch.

Clean up

It takes a short time to tidy up the yard if you don't let things pile up. And by keeping plant debris cleaned up and weeds pulled, you greatly reduce the pests and diseases that would otherwise survive to return the following spring. A little time devoted to cleanup each week will save many times that in future work later.

Right plant, right place

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Joe Lamp'l, Scripps Howard News Service

If 30 minutes is all you have to spend each week, find some ways to minimize your time while creating a beautiful yet lower maintenance yard and garden.

previousnext

Latest comments

Thunder are making noise

organization that has SA roots. They know how to manage and build a...

Why not PG? We want in on the battle. We are always on the outside looking...

Girls basketball rankings

Are GREAT ALL of THEM!

Boys basketball rankings

Escalante lost by 50 wow! What a drop off in talent it sickens you but it...

Utes fall to Seattle U. at home

Two comments re: Ute Basketball presently -1) Why toss up 3s when if you...

I now live at about 10K feet elevation in the Breckenridge Colorado area -...

Thunder rolls by Jazz

Mike Moreau: (coach) "I think they've (Jazz) pretty much made their bed -...

BLM delays Nevada horse roundup

I love mule deer, big horn sheep and other native fauna. They are native...

I was peer pressured to go into this hell hole - it was like being an ant in...

The problem is that people should know their limits. If you're 6 foot tall...

Advertisements