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reducing gardening cost ?

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  • reducing gardening cost ?

    How do i save water while gardening, the poor rainfall has shot up my gardening expenses, how do i cut down my gardening cost ?

  • #2
    Besides water, what do you spend money on for your gardening? Different people garden differently, so how they can save varies. For instance many people buy mulch every year. For some that expense can be cut: Do not remove and throw away the old mulch. Old mulch works as well as new mulch---better actually as it releases more humus and nutrients to the soil than does new mulch. Instead of buying mulch at all, gardeners can mulch with locally available, sometimes free, sometimes even gathered from one's own yard materials--leaves (shredded or whole), pine straw, grass clippings, seaweed from the beach, cotton hulls, pecan hulls, hay, wheat and oat straw, alfalfa, etc. Use what is local and cheap or a even a free waste product of local agriculture.

    But rather than spin our wheels suggesting things that don't apply to you, how about you tell us what you spend money on in gardening and we might be able to suggest alternatives.
    "There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid

    "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass

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    • #3
      I'm curious to see if I can make new friends here

      Hello,

      Some days in the past I decided to say hello to all on different places so I decided to give it a try and
      step up and start to listen like never before so from now on I promise to be part of all this, I will try to do my best to give
      some value here... I dont want to stop things here let's carry on with what we were doing... Anyone else thinks like me? ... too many vodkas

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      • #4
        The time of day that you water your garden is key. The best time is just before the sun comes up. This gives your soil an opportunity to soak in the water, and your plants can drink it up before the sun appears and evaporates it. I forget the statistics, but when you water in the sun, a large portion is evaporated before it ever gets to the roots of your plants.

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        • #5
          Start a water barrel even with just a rubbermaid type tub. Put one outside any time it rains and gather some water. Every little bit helps.
          I had 10 buckets out last weekend and got 4 total full when done. A lot of free water!

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          • #6
            Instead of mulch get horse manure, alot of places around here give it free just to be rid of it. (i live by a horse race track) If you get the older stuff it doesn't smell bad

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            • #7
              share plants with your friends and neighbors of plants that are in need of dividing.

              Collect seeds from your plants to use for plants in upcomming seasons.

              Start a compost bin, cheap fertilizer using your kitchen scraps & yard waste

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              • #8
                I just don't see how gardening is cost effective for most people. You can get terrific vegetables at your local farmer's market at low prices.

                Most guys in the office talking about all they spend gardening, fetilizer, equipment, etc., and then end up bringing boxes and bags of vegetables into the office to give away.

                I mean honestly, don't you get sick of squash and tomatoes? I can get cucumbers, tomatoes and squash for 3 or 4 for $1. Corn the same. Can you really grow a tomato for a lot less than .$25?

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by wincrasher View Post
                  Can you really grow a tomato for a lot less than .$25?

                  You betcha' you can. I buy a .99 cent packet of seeds in the early spring and start them indoors. By May I'll have roughly 3 dozen plants if everything works right. Even if it doesn't, I'll have 18 to 24 plants. That's a pile of tomatoes. Of course, I'm not counting tools and labor and all that. Gardening is a hobby and isn't neccesarily intended to beat anyones price. I look at the garden as an outdoor project that I start every year and take great pride in the succesful completion.
                  "Those who can't remember the past are condemmed to repeat it".- George Santayana.

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                  • #10
                    Exactly.

                    I understand as a hobby or entertainment it's a different equation, but this is in a frugal message board.

                    Tools, equipment, water, fertilizer, rabbit killing, and most importantly your time. And then you give away about 80% of the vegetables. I bet the home grown tomatoes that you actually end up eating are like $2 each!

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by wincrasher View Post
                      Exactly.

                      I understand as a hobby or entertainment it's a different equation, but this is in a frugal message board.

                      Tools, equipment, water, fertilizer, rabbit killing, and most importantly your time. And then you give away about 80% of the vegetables. I bet the home grown tomatoes that you actually end up eating are like $2 each!
                      I doubt they cost much since they are only fractions of a penny to begin with. Most of my tools used aren't garden specific and while I do give some veggies away, I also have many jars of vegetables canned that are used year round. In the end, I'm sure I'm well ahead. As for time, that's an individual call, and if your gardening is taking away from time that could be spent earning money: drop the hoe and get to work
                      .
                      "Those who can't remember the past are condemmed to repeat it".- George Santayana.

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                      • #12
                        You can still be frugal when it comes to gardening and save a lot of money.
                        I've reduced my fresh fruit and vege bill by quite a bit and all you need is some time and effort and it doesn;t need to cost hardly any money.

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                        • #13
                          What about using your shower water or dish water to water the garden with?

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by wincrasher View Post
                            I just don't see how gardening is cost effective for most people. You can get terrific vegetables at your local farmer's market at low prices.

                            Most guys in the office talking about all they spend gardening, fetilizer, equipment, etc., and then end up bringing boxes and bags of vegetables into the office to give away.

                            I mean honestly, don't you get sick of squash and tomatoes? I can get cucumbers, tomatoes and squash for 3 or 4 for $1. Corn the same. Can you really grow a tomato for a lot less than .$25?
                            Totally agree with you... And not to mention the electricity expenditure for sprinklers and human effort into keeping the garden healthy. Its just too much work.

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                            • #15
                              Of course, not everyone uses sprinklers that use electricity. In fact, I do not know anyone who does. The closest I can think of is someone whose water well uses an electric pump to supplement the weak artesian effect. Use hoses and sprinklers that work on water pressure and that electricity cost will be negated. Better yet, learn to make best use of whatever water falls from the sky. Here in the Mississippi valley, water falls from the sky pretty reliably and well spaced through the growing season.

                              To the original poster, another thing that is helpful in water saving is to plant rather closely together in blocks or wide beds rather than in rows. That way the leaves of the plants shade the soil and really reduce evaporation. Also if you have space, you can plant your vining crops such as tomatoes, melons, squash, pumpkins, and perhaps even beans so that they scramble across the ground rather than up on a trellis, fence, cage, or other support. Again, that allows the plants to shade the soil, reducing evaporation.

                              If you live in a very arid area, doing the opposite of raised bed gardening can help with the water situation. Dig out planting beds recessing them into the soil. The planting area will look like a shallow pan. Put the soil you dig out around the outside edges of the recessed planting bed. Being recessed, the plant roots will be closer to the more deeply penetrated water in the soil and they will be partially shaded by the sides of the beds/pans. Do make use of compost and other organic material to enrich your soil and to hold onto moisture in these pans. This method is historically and currently used in Morocco and also in the American southwest.

                              Addressing anyone who thinks gardening is a waste of time-- It provides high quality food, good exercise including balance challenges, stretches, steady aerobics, squats, various kinds of weight bearing--all with no gym fee. For me, it often provides social time with neighbors who stop to visit. A single apple tree will more than pay for its purchase the first year of harvest. After that it is free. Many of my plants provide not just food, but the means to propagate them next year without having to buy anything more: I save seeds, cuttings, root pieces. The people who do not come out ahead money-wise are probably the ones who think they have to buy soil in plastic bags, buy lumber to hold up raised beds made of that plastic bagged soil, buy fertilizer, buy special (electricity consuming?) sprinklers, buy more and more special tools, buy gimmicky stuff from catalogs and garden centers, buy commercial row markers, poisons, weed killers, animal traps, insecticides, fungicides, special carts, ...... etc.
                              "There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid

                              "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass

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