How to grow vegetables

Start with good seed varieties.

Food!! That’s where it begins. Most people don’t give their vegetables enough Food. Fruiting vegetables are like teenagers…..they really go through it.

But what is equally important is the food itself, how the food is delivered, and the quality of the rootzone. A poor quality rootzone will negate everything else.

We are asked all the time “how to grow vegetables” successfully, without the back-breaking dirt work. There are lots of frustrated gardeners who aren’t getting the results they dream of for the work they’ve put in. There are even more people who want to know how to grow vegetables in dwellings that don’t accommodate gardening, ie; apartments, condos, townhouses, urban situations, small backyards. And there are a ton of people who still pine away for homegrown vegetables, have the space, but don’t have the energy or time to engage in so much labor.

Both fantastic and horrible results can come from hand-watered container gardens. These are well-meaning attempts to maximize small-space vegetable production. However, due to poor potting soil, compaction, exhausted nutrients, salt build-up, and inconsistent watering, the results are frequently disappointing. Done properly, container gardening can produce astounding yields of nearly any vegetable in small spaces:

-if you don’t get at least 25 tomatoes from one planter something is wrong;

-if you don’t get at least 20 bell peppers from one planter, something is wrong;

-if you don’t get at least 50 eggplant (Ichiban variety)* from one planter…..you’re missing out.

Growing fresh vegetables is one of the most rewarding things people can do. At Urban Farm Fertilizers we are committed to helping people grow outstanding vegetables with minimal effort.

*The Ichiban variety produces purple, cucumber-shaped eggplant up to 12″. In the long Texas growing season we have harvested slightly over 100 from one plant in one planter.

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