While most everyone associates gardening with growing a garden outdoors, that is not how all folks do it. When the weather outside will not permit, some folks enjoy Gardening indoors. Thus, we have now come up with a way to make that happen. Gardening indoors, under a glass housing, is called green house gardening. The following paragraphs will discuss greenhouse gardening, as well as some of the processes involved in doing it successfully.
Green house gardening does not drastically differ from the outdoor methods of gardening, although there are some differences. The main difference in green house gardening is it is highly important to learn how to properly control the temperature inside of your greenhouse. Most plants tend to thrive in temperatures slightly lower than normal room temperature, and most of the time require much more humidity than we live with in our Homes. This is a general rule when it comes to greenhouse gardening.
The very best way to produce the proper amount of sunlight, heat, and humidity in your garden greenhouse is to construct your actual greenhouse in an area you can take advantage of maximum levels of sunlight all year long. It is important to pay most attention to the sun locations during the spring, as well as autumn, months, when the sun is at its lowest point in the southern skies. For this reason, the ideal location to construct a garden greenhouse is where sun rays will reach through a southeastern to southwestern direction without obstruction.
When you are green house gardening, it is important to space your plants out evenly throughout your gardening areas of your greenhouse. This should be done in order to help ensure that ventilation flows evenly throughout your greenhouse. You should also open your greenhouse doors during the morning hours, then close them in the late afternoon. This will, as well, help to ensure proper ventilation. You can use these methods during the winter months, too, as long as you make sure weather reports do not indicate frost or snow.
As with any type of gardening, a water source if vital to the Healthy production of your different plants. This is absolutely true with greenhouse gardening, as well. It is important to understand that your plants will not have natural water sources, however, it is as equally as important to understand not to over-water as a result of this. Some sort of irrigation system may work best in your garden greenhouse.
Finally, there are many ways you can design where your plants will grow when you choose green house gardening. This is much like outdoor garden planning, except that with greenhouse gardening you will not be growing your plants in the ground, but in deep containers, growing boxes, as well as big tubs. By doing this, you are not only protecting the roots of your plants from freezing ground temperatures, you are also making them easy to move, in the event they need special attention.
Richard Henderson
http://www.articlesbase.com/gardening-articles/great-tips-for-greenhouse-gardening-91162.html
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#1 by Alison on May 24, 2010 - 8:05 pm
A huge great moth/beetle/thing in the greenhouse?
I was pottering in the greenhouse this morning and suddenly heard a really loud noise – it was a HUGE great thing trapped in a plant pot. It was nearly two inches long and an inch across and looked like a brown beetle, with hard wing casings. It had large antennae with orange furry fan-shaped bits on the end of them. Before my toddler had chance to eat it I managed to get it outside in the pot and, er, bravely tipped it into our neighbour’s garden.
Any ideas what this could have been? It looked like a huge moth, but I didn’t think they had wing casings. We are in South East England, before you start coming at me with scary great Aussie/US beasties!
#2 by Sal*UK on May 25, 2010 - 1:07 am
Sounds like a May bug – horrid things!!!!
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#3 by steven e on May 25, 2010 - 1:09 am
mayfly?
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#4 by bizzy on May 25, 2010 - 1:11 am
I am also in the South East, and was going to say it sounds like a July bug. I have just done a quick search, and it seems that a May bug and a July bug are pretty much the same thing. A huge flying insect that’s horrible. My mum said she got one caught in her hair when she was a teenager (so more than 40 years ago) and it carried on flapping so it got more and more tangled. She had to have it cut out.
Sounds like you did the right thing in getting rid of it – not sure I could have been quite so brave though!
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