Picking the Ideal Location
for Your Garden
Picking the Ideal Location for your Garden
Once you have picked what garden you want, there are many other factors you need to
decide before you actually get to work with your gardening tools. Mainly you need to choose its location. This
is usually decided by several factors: How you will water it, how much shade it needs, etc. Some of these
questions can be very important in deciding whether your garden lives or dies, so don't take them lightly. You
need to take each one into special consideration.
Choosing the Garden's
Location
Within your yard is one of the more important things to
decide.
You want to choose a location that will provide an ideal climate for the plants in your
garden. I don't know what type of garden you're dealing with so I can't give you specific advice, but if you do a Google
search for the plant you're dealing with then you'll find a plethora of sites informing you about the perfect
conditions for its growing. After this, it's just a matter of finding the most shaded or most sunny spot in
your yard.
Another deciding factor is how you plan on watering your garden. If you have a sprinkler
system already installed for your grass, then it could be a good idea to put your garden in the middle of
your yard. Then it will get watered at the same time, and require no extra work from your part. But if this
doesn't provide for a good location for your garden, then you might end up watering it by hose or dragging a
sprinkler out there. In this case, just make sure your garden is
within the ideal distance for a hose to reach. While this might not seem like a good thing to base the entire
location of your garden on, you'll be surprised at how nice it is to plan out in advanced.
Getting the perfect amount of shade for your garden can be a difficult endeavor. Once you have
a basic idea for where you want your garden, you might want to watch it and record how many hours it spends
in sunlight and how many it spends in shade. Compare your findings to an online web site, and you should be
able to determine whether the spot you chose is ideal or not for planting and starting your garden in. Of
course the amount will change as the seasons change, but this should give you a good idea of what to
basically expect for the rest of the year. If necessary, later you can put up some kind of shade to protect
your garden from getting too much sun.
After you've determined the ideal place for your garden and whether it has the right amount of
sunlight, and whether you will be able to conveniently water it, you're one step closer to actually starting
your garden. Of course there are other factors that I have overlooked here, but mostly you should be able to
decide whether your location is good or not based on common sense. Just think: If I were a plant, would I be
able to flourish here? If you can honestly answer yes, then I think its time for you to head out to your
local gardening store and buy the necessary soil and fertilizer to get started! Have fun!
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