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Organic Gardening. Organic Gardening. Rodale’s The organic gardener’s bible http://www.rodaleinstitute.org/. National Organic Program. Developed national organic standards and established an organic certification program http://www.ams.usda.gov/AMSv1.0/nop. National Organic Program.
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Organic Gardening • Rodale’s • The organic gardener’s bible • http://www.rodaleinstitute.org/
National Organic Program • Developed national organic standards and established an organic certification program • http://www.ams.usda.gov/AMSv1.0/nop
National Organic Program Organic crops are raised without • most conventional pesticides • petroleum-based fertilizers • sewage sludge-based fertilizers
National Organic Program • Prohibits GMOs • As a general rule, natural substances are allowed • Synthetic substances prohibited
Does Natural Mean Organic? • Natural and organic are not interchangeable • Free-range, hormone-free, and natural don't mean “organic”
Certification • Accredited by USDA-accredited certifying agents • The information an applicant must submit • organic system plan • substances used • record keeping
Organic Materials Review Institute (OMRI) • National nonprofit organization that determines which products are allowed for use in organic production • OMRI products • http://www.omri.org/
Crop Scheduling • Burpee • http://www.burpee.com/gygg/growingCalendarWithZipCode.jsp?catid=1000&_requestid=647487 • Southeastern States • http://www.thegrower.com/south-east-vegetable-guide/pdf/ • Clemson • http://www.clemson.edu/extension/hgic/plants/vegetables/gardening/hgic1256.html
Log Gardening • Hugelkultur • Bury logs in a mound • Retain moisture • Decomposition provides • Nutrients • Aeration • Boosts microorganisms
Heirloom Plants • Open-pollinated • Grown in an “earlier era” • Before 1951, before hybridization became popular • Better flavor
Cover Crop • http://www.clemson.edu/sustainableag/IP024_covercrop.pdf
Cover Crop Catch Crop • Reduce nutrient leaching
Cover Crop Improve soil • Increases organic matter in soil • Improves soil structure • Increases microbial activity
Cover Crop Nature’s fertilizers • Nitrogen production from legumes • Clover, beans, peas, vetch
Cover Crop Rooting can aerate soil • Blue lupine a biological plow in compacted soils
Cover Crop Weed suppression • Smother weeds • Allelopathic effects • Inhibit or slow growth of weeds by releasing natural toxins, or allelochemicals • Small grains (rye), sorghum, sudangrass
Companion Planting Certain combinations have synergistic effects • Improve growth • Prevent pests • Attract beneficials
Companion Planting • Rose and garlic • Tomatoes and cabbage • Corn and beans
Crop Rotation • Don’t grow the same crop in the same soil year after year
Crop Rotation • The longer the rotation, the better the results • 4-year rotation: Corn, soybeans, oats, alfalfa • Break up insect and disease life cycles • Reduce weeds • Improve soil nutrition
Crop Rotation • Iowa State University • Marsden Farm rotation experiment started in 2003 • The longer rotations produced better yields • Reduced fertilizer/herbicides up to 88% • http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/19/a-simple-fix-for-food/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=1
Organic v. Conventional • Standford study suggests no health benefit • However, do recognize reduced exposure to synthetic pesticides, growth hormones and GMO • http://med.stanford.edu/ism/2012/september/organic.html
Vegetable Gardening • Minimum of six hours of sunlight • Best with eight to ten hours • Leafy crops, like lettuce, are more tolerant of shade
Three Sister’s Garden • Sweet corn planted first • Green beans planted a week later • Climb the corn stalks • Beans are legumes • Fix nitrogen
Three Sister’s Garden • Squash planted a week later between the corn and beans to shade out weeds
Square Foot Gardening • Grid pattern to conserve space • Often raised beds • http://timssquarefootgarden.com
Organic Gardening Compost • Yard and food wastes make up approximately 30% of the waste stream in the United States
Compost • Transforming organic matter into soil-like material • Invertebrates (insects and earthworms) and microorganisms (bacteria and fungi)
Compost Improves • Aeration • Water retention • Increase microbes
Compost • Fast or active composting done in 2 to 6 weeks
Carbon-to-Nitrogen(C:N) • Bacteria and fungi digest carbon as an energy source and ingest nitrogen for protein synthesis • Carbon, the "food" • Nitrogen, the digestive enzymes
Carbon-to-Nitrogen(C:N) • Brown • Carbon • Green • Nitrogen
Carbon-to-Nitrogen(C:N) • 30:1 (carbon to nitrogen) (Clemson) • 30 pounds of carbon for every 1 pound of nitrogen • Another source reports 4 parts brown to 1 part green
Carbon-to-Nitrogen(C:N) • Too much carbon, turns cold • Too much nitrogen, stinks (ammonia gas)
Carbon-to-Nitrogen(C:N) • Carbon are “browns” • Leaves • Dried grass clippings • Straw • Sawdust (moderation) • Nitrogen are “greens” • Fresh grass clippings • Fresh manure • Kitchen scraps (fruit, vegetables, coffee grounds, tea bags)
Materials to NOT Compost • Meat • Attract scavengers • Ashes from grill • Dog and cat feces • Disease risk • And it stinks
Surface Area • Decomposition takes place when particle surfaces are in contact with air • Chopping, shredding, mowing, or breaking up the material • Increased surface area increases decomposition • And heat
Aeration • Decomposition consumes oxygen • Aerobic decomposition • Anaerobic decomposition occurs with low oxygen • Stinks • Turn pile frequently • Pitchfork
Moisture • Moisture content of 40-60 percent • Below 40%, microbial activity slows • Above 60%, anaerobic decomposition
Temperature • Microorganisms generate heat as they decompose organic material • 90F to 140F is ideal • Activity slows down if too low or too high
Vermicomposting • Worm composting • Redworms • 50F to 70F