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AHP Newsgroup: Grow Your Own Barnside Organic Produce

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

In this new green tip from Lucinda Dyer, author of Eco-Horsekeeping: Over 100 Budget-Friendly Ways You and Your Horse Can Save the Planet (www.horseandriderbooks.com), we find out the affordable way to grow your own organic produce. Even better—you can weed, water, and fertilize in between riding lessons and grooming sessions.

Instead of planting flowers around the barn this spring, consider something that’s both colorful and edible—vegetables and melons. Gone are the days when gardens demanded a quarter-acre and a plow. These days, you can raise a bumper crop of great organic produce—everything from tomatoes and snap beans to radishes and squash—in a few square feet of soil or even within the limited confines of a container.

There is now a literal “truck load” of books on the market about how to create a mini-garden, but these are two of my favorites: All New Square Foot Gardening: Grow More in Less Space by the elder statesman of small space gardening, Mel Bartholomew; and The Bountiful Container by Rose Marie Nichols McGee and Maggie Stuckey.

The best melons I’ve ever eaten were grown in my friend Michelle’s compost piles. Okay, so she is English and we know they can garden anywhere, but as melons are fertilizer and water hogs, a compost pile is the ideal place to grow everything from cantaloupes to watermelon. Here’s how:

Eco Note: To make your barnside gardening even greener, recycle gently used muck buckets (just remember to put holes in the bottom for drainage) and use them as containers, and instead of dumping your water buckets in the driveway, use that water on your veggies and melons. I provide more ideas like these, as well as detailed information on how to start and maintain compost in my book Eco-Horsekeeping.

This tip (and others from Lucinda Dyer) are available for reprint. Contact Rebecca Didier (rdidier@sover.net) at Trafalgar Square Books (www.horseandriderbooks.com) for more information.