ORGANIC GARDENING. Sheriden Hansen, BS, Plant Science, USU. MS Student, Fruit Production, USU

Similar documents
Organic Herb Gardening Erika Yigzaw B.Com, LL.B (Hons), Master Gardener.

BASIC ORGANIC GARDENING Soil, Irrigation and Garden Management

Backyard Composting CRAIG G. COGGER & DAN M. SULLIVAN

Getting the Most out of Your Strawberry Soil Test Report. General Information

Best Vegetable Garden Ever. C Compost will improve your soil C Calendar to plan your garden C Consistency in your care

Composting: the rotten truth

Soil Composting. Composting Containers:

Soil Health: Composting, and the Benefits of Intercropping and Cover Crops

Small Scale Composting. Sejal Lanterman Cooperative Extension Educator

Life of a Lawn. Fact Sheet

1. E8 Integrated Pest Management (IPM) Action Plan

Integrated Pest Management

Soil is the Key (Chapter 3)

Soil. The Foundation of the Garden

Sunlight. Chlorophyll

On-Farm Composting Vermicomposting

Using IPM in your Ag Program- Understanding Texas Laws

Organically Managed Lands Program. Durango, CO. Chip Osborne Osborne Organics. Prepared by:

Adding Materials. Speeding up the Compost Process

Compost Production and Utilization. Natalie Yoder M.S. Horticulture and Organic Soil Fertility Colorado State University

Composting at Home. Getting Started. Location

Compost Happens. Pam Brown, Garden Coach Pampered Gardeners, LLC pamperedgardeners.com

Unit D: Fruit and Vegetable Crop Production. Lesson 1: Planning and Preparing a Vegetable Garden Site

Compost Workshop A. Post

Gardening Basics. Essential Information for Every Gardener

Vegetable Gardening 101

Managing Backyard Apples Organically

Pepper IPM Elements Revised March, 2012

Love Dirt. healthy soil, healthy future. Mission Composts! John Paul, PhD President

Soil Health and Fertilizer. Pam Brown, Extension Agent Emeritus, Gardening Coach

Soil Quality / Understanding Soil Health what are we missing?

WASTE REDUCTION REUSE RECYCLE. Craig G. Cogger REDUCE EB1784 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE & HOME ECONOMICS

Handouts: MontGuide Can I Grow That Here? MontGuide Planting a Successful Home Vegetable Garden MontGuide Hotbeds and Cold Frames for

WATER: Just right. AIR: How. Compost Moisture Squeeze Test. WATER: Too wet. Squeeze Test part II. WATER: Too dry 1/27/2017

Low Input Landscaping

Good Practice Guide: Composting for SME s

Assessing and Amending Your Garden Soil Craig Cogger, Soil Scientist Emeritus Washington State University Puyallup

THE HEALTHY GARDEN ALTERNATIVE:

[residential composting]

Green Lawns. Promoting environmental stewardship

BASICS OF SOIL FERTILITY FOR URBAN (AND NON-URBAN) GROWERS. Erin Silva and Anne Pfeiffer UW-Madison PLANTS NEED

Name DOB* Phone ** Address. I have read, understand, and agree to comply with the Mansfield Community Farm & Gardens guidelines.

Waste Wise Queensland

Getting Started with Your Vegetable Garden

Composting and Good Soils: A Gardener s Best Tools

GARDEN BASICS 2019 COMPOST & SOIL HEALTH. by Mark Murphy contact: BottleHollowFarm.com

Master Composter COMPOST FOOD. Who Does the Work. Basics of Composting. How is Compost Made. Needs for the Composting Process

Information Note Choosing a Cover Crop. Crimson Clover

What Are the Options for Organic Lawn Care?

Using Fertilizers: Feeding plants. Lydia Clayton UAF Cooperative Extension Service Kenai Peninsula District

2014 O.G.S. Harvest Conference Back Yard Composting Made Easy. Mark Langner MAYTime Composting Burnsville, NC

BACKYARD COMPOSTING! Presented by: Matt Tracy Red Planet Vegetables Kate Sayles Northern RI Conservation District

Chapter 2. Vegetation Control Options for Rights-of-Way Managers Table of Contents

Living Soil, Lovely Garden!

Compost Applications to Sports Fields

LIFETIME COMPOST TUMBLER HOW TO INSTRUCTIONS

Backyard Composting Guide

Alternative Pesticide Management for the Lawn and Garden

BOTANY/HORTICULTURE PLANT SCIENCE AG

LET S MAKE COMPOST DENVER URBAN GARDENS SCHOOL GARDEN AND NUTRITION CURRICULUM 1

From Garbage to Gold. Turning Organic Material Remains into a Valuable Resource. Amy Cabaniss, PhD URI Outreach Center

Backyard Composting The Basics. Mimi Cooper Centre Region Council of Governments

IPM Fun with Insects, Weeds and the Environment. Lesson #3 Weed IPM. The New York State Integrated Pest Management Program

ORGANIC LAWN CARE TURF SPECIES SELECTION

Composting 101 Pay Dirt

The Art of Composting

Backyard Composting. Granville Garden Club 7/11/2018

Recommended Resources: The following resources may be useful in teaching this

Chapter 6: Putting Compost to Use

Science of Life Explorations

Stability. Macronutrients. Moisture. Micronutrients. Keep slope in place long term vegetation Terracing/contouring Hay bales Logs Other

Organic Fertilizers. Disadvantages. Advantages

2016 Community Garden Guidelines

For the Love of the Earth

Your Logo Here. Recycle with us today! Grow with us tomorrow! Kevin Anderson

For the Love of the Earth

General Session Papers. REDUCING PESTICIDE INPUTS IN PUBLIC AREAS Frederick Baxendale Department of Entomology University of Nebraska

Classroom Composting

Composting Made Simple

Eco new farmers. Module 2 Soil and Nutrient Cycling. Section 1 Soils and soil fertility

Composting COMPOSTING

A Plant & Soil Ecosystem

Sustainable, Organic Vegetable Gardening. Presented by: Kent Phillips

Compost Magic. By Lynn Gillespie

Know Your Weeds. How to Control Undesirable Plants (i.e. Weeds) OLLI May 2, 2013

COMPOST A USER'S GUIDE TO. The Beauty of Your Lawn & Garden Blossoms from the Soil

Insect and Disease Control

Organic Gardening. Plano Community Gardeners Share Their Experience

An America Rose Society Presentation 2005

Integrated Pest Management. University of California Statewide IPM Program

Composting is a naturally occurring process

Vegetables Chapter 10 OSUE MGV Training. Pam Bennett OSUE State MGV Coordinator Horticulture Educator

Use of fertilizers is needed for all types of long-term crop production in order to achieve yield levels which make the effort of cropping worthwhile

HOME COMPOSTING WORKSHOP

Master Gardener Recommended Horticulture Best Management Practices

Organic Recycling. What is Garbage? What is Compost?

KEEPING PLANTS HEALTHY

Sam Turner Agronomist B.T. Loftus Ranches, Inc.

Master Composting Program. Sam Angima OSU Extension Lincoln County, Oregon

/ A/ -Composting: The Basics. An ancient practice, composting is mentioned in the Bible several times and can be

Transcription:

ORGANIC GARDENING Sheriden Hansen, BS, Plant Science, USU MS Student, Fruit Production, USU

Getting to Know You BS Plant Science USU, MS Fruit Production, USU Assistant at USU Research Farm in Kaysville Advanced Master Gardener Farmer BS in Nursing U of U Plants are my midlife crisis and I love it!

WHY ORGANIC? Get nutrition, enjoy tastier food, avoid GMO s Save money Protect future generations Protect soil and prevent soil erosion problems Protect our water quality Save energy Keep chemicals, hormones, and antibiotics off your plate Support small farmers Preserve ecosystems Beautify your community And MANY more reasons

What is ORGANIC anyway? "integrate cultural, biological, and mechanical practices that foster cycling of resources, promote ecological balance, and conserve biodiversity. APPROVED organic chemical, pesticide, and herbicide usage. NO industrial solvents, irradiation, or genetic engineering.

SOIL AND SOIL AMMENDMENT

SOIL Soil texture is a qualitative classification tool used in both the field and laboratory to determine classes for agricultural soils based on their physical texture. What is the texture of your soil? Sand, Silt, Clay Determines how nutrients and water will adhere to the soil. How do you determine the soil texture? Hand texture test Mason jar test Organic matter/humus content in your soil

Further Soil Testing Nutrient availablity Salt content ph 7.0-7.8 normal Organic matter content Residual pesticides Testing kit at USU Extension office Testing should be done annually or every other year prior to addition compost or fertilizers.

How do we amend without chemicals?

Compost = Air + Water + Nitrogen + Carbon Carbon Sources Usually brown or yellow in color BROWNS Leaves Straw Corn Stalks Nitrogen Sources Can be any color, generally referred to as GREENS Kitchen scraps Moist plant matter (grass clippings) Animal by-products C:N should be 30:1

What not to add to your compost: Meat scraps Dairy scraps Large branches By-products from carnivorous animals (dogs and cats) Plastics Anything that smells horrible or that you wouldn t want in your soil

Composting has a magic number! 140ºF

Composting Cont. Turn the pile often Add water for the microbes Microbial activity is what increases the temperature 140ºF is critical to control harmful microorganisms MORE INFORMATION: https://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/factsheet/hg-compost- 01.pdf

Organic Fertilizers: Plant fertilizer sea kelp, alfalfa meal, etc. Green manure vetch, red clover, winter wheat, etc. Natural fertilizer from animals blood meal, bone meal, feather meal, fish meal, and composted chicken manure Mined natural fertilizer gypsum and soft rock phosphate Dry vs. wet application Can burn plants, some of these fertilizers are high in salts. Apply at appropriate rates and water in. ADDITIONAL RESOURCE: https://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/factsheet/hg-510.pdf

QUESTIONS SO FAR?

WEEDS

Ever feel like this?

What is a weed? A plant out of place An unwanted plant A plant growing where it is not desired A plant that a lot of time and money is spent on for elimination purposes A plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered ~Emmerson A weed is but an unloved flower (greeting card)

How do we get rid of it? Prevention Cultural Weed Control Mulches and cover crops Mechanical weed control Herbicides???

Prevention Focuses on keeping new weeds out and prevention of weed seed or perennial plant part spread. You MUST understand weed biology. Life cycle of the plant? Annual, Biennial, Perennial How does the weed spread? Seed, runners, rhizomes, all of the above? When does it go to seed? Winter and Summer Annuals. How long are seeds viable? Sanitation: removing or destroying weeds in a neighboring field before they release seed. Weeds can be introduced through manure, compost, hay, straw, animal feed, contaminated crop seed, or other materials

Cultural Weed Control This is any tactic that makes the crop more competitive against weeds. Includes crop rotation, altering plant dates, etc. Planting dates influence the number and type of weeds present. For example: Delaying planting of spring seeded crops. Higher soil temperatures can help the crop grow more quickly and weeds that often emerge earlier and compete with the crop can be killed before planting to reduce the potential seedbank. Stale seedbed: Garden area is tilled, weeds are allowed to emerge and then are killed while still small. Can have several flushes of weeds. Once killed, then plant your crops.

Cover crops and mulches Using competition to crowd out weeds. Mulch provides a physical barrier and blocks out most light, reducing weed germination. Plastic mulches, weed fabric, straw, newspaper, grass clippings. Cover crops compete for resources like light, water, nutrition, and space. They can act as a mulch or a physical barrier by smothering weeds. Allelopathic compounds Buckwheat, winter wheat, vetch, clovers

Mechanical weed control The key to managing weeds in an organic system! Includes tilling, physically pulling weeds, cultivation, mowing, and FLAMING. It is critical that mechanical weed control is done when weeds are SMALL and MANAGEABLE.

Chemical weed control (herbicides) Not a lot of options. Corn gluten meal used as a preemergent. Not easy to get. Citric Acid Garlic Clove oil Acetic Acid (may not be approved for use as an herbicide) List of organic herbicides at: http://www.groworganic.com/wee d-pest-control/organic-weedcontrol/organic-herbicide.html

Pest Control

Insects are important POLLINATORS: bees, beetles, flies, wasps, butterflies, and moths all pollinate. DECOMPOSERS: break down organic matter. BIOLOGICAL CONTROL: some insects control pest insects (beneficial wasps, mantids). PART OF THE FOOD CHAIN: for larger insects, animals, and even humans. NOT ALL ARE BAD, so we need to be careful!

How do we control the unwanted insects? IPM Integrated Pest Management Codling moth trap Use as many different tactics as we can to control pests. Promote plant health. Healthy plants can withstand some insect damage. Determine what your threshold for damage is. Regular scouting to detect insects early. Proper identification of insect. Limit chemical applications.

Mechanical/Physical Control Barriers and screens Traps and bands Mulch Tillage Sanitation Hand removal of insects

Cultural Control Rotate crops, planting locations Seek resistant and tolerant plants (grafted tomatoes) Avoid susceptible plants (even favorites) Make sure you are starting out with pest free plants Diversify your plant selection Keep plants healthy

Biological Control Insects controlling pests (mantids, spiders, ladybugs, wasps, etc.) Predators, parasitoids, and pathogens Most pests have enemies Will respond at low/moderate density Encourage natural enemies Avoid monocultures

Chemical Control Selective, short residual, earth-friendly Microbial (bacterial, nematode, fungi) Specific to target species or life stage Slow acting, can take many days to work (nematodes on grubs) Soaps, oil, dust, mineral (zinc, copper, sulfur) Smother to prevent breathing or disrupt the waxy outer layer of softbodied insects, causing them to dry out and die Concern, Safer, Surround, Sucrocide, Dri-Die, Bonide, Entrust, Success Botanical (pyrethrum, nicotine, spinosad) Pyganic, Evergreen Spinosad (bacterial fermentation) Conserve, Success, Entrust

MORE INFORMATION AT UTAHPESTS.USU.EDU

ANY QUESTIONS?