Indoor Organic Gardening
Sunday, August 16th, 2009The process is still the same whether you are growing plants indoors in your home or you are using a greenhouse for indoor organic gardening. Organic gardening goes beyond the scope of simply eliminating chemicals and other unnatural substances from the products you use to care for your plants. It’s the entire process of providing healthy food products to your plants and keeping them free of pests, not with chemicals, but by using other “good” pests to eliminate the “bad” pests. It’s similar to the farmer who puts a scarecrow in the garden to repel the crows. It’s a matter of utilizing products that are on hand, and making use of our resources to combat the problems during indoor organic gardening.
With your indoor garden, it’s even more vital that you exercise indoor organic gardening techniques than with your outdoor garden. Perhaps that doesn’t sound politically correct, but in essence, you are putting your own family at risk if you use harsh chemicals on the plants you grow indoors. That doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t care just as much if you’re growing things outdoors, but outdoors, oftentimes the natural elements in the air will eliminate many of the toxins that might otherwise become a part of the plants themselves, but when you grow things indoors, you do not have the potential for that to happen. Thus, it’s more important to practice indoor organic gardening for the safety of your family and those who may enter the building where your plants are housed.
Being restricted to use of smaller areas is one of the challenges of organic gardening indoors. You, of course, want to choose plants that you are going to grow contingent upon the space you have available so that they will be able to grow properly, and you can keep them healthy for the duration of the time they must be indoors. For example, unless you have a greenhouse, you are not going to grow lettuce, potatoes, or corn because there isn’t enough room. In fact, one couldn’t even grow corn in a greenhouse, though they may attempt lettuce or potatoes if it’s a big enough building.
The two most important factors with indoor organic gardening is to be certain you have enough space for the plants you wish to grow and be more cognizant of the ingredients in the products you use, choosing elements such as other insects to control insect growth in your plants rather than chemical repellents. Indoor planting requires both knowledge and preparation and if you are doing it for the first time you should be sure of what exactly are the needs and arrange for all the organic products in advance.














