Natural Pest Control in an Organic Garden
By: Kat Yares

Walk into any garden store, and you will find shelf after shelf of chemicals to help control the pests in your garden. You can spend hundreds of dollars for these products every season.

This year, you've decided to go organic. You know this means that you won't be using those chemicals with unpronounceable names. You're going to be using natural ingredients and nature itself to keep your garden pest free. So, the question is: what works and what doesn't?

The best defense against garden pests is good soil and healthy plants. Always rotate crops so that nothing is growing in the same spot that it did last year. Begin your organic garden by working in compost to fertilize the soil. You cannot add too much compost to your garden.

If you plan to use hybrid seeds, instead of heirloom, choose seeds and plants that are bred to resist pests. Each year, more and more varieties of vegetables are being developed that are pest and disease resistant.

Cull out any plant that looks unhealthy as a sick plant only invites unwanted guests to your garden. A sick or diseased plant will not produce as well as a healthy plant, so you are not losing anything by pulling it from the ground.

Fine mesh netting, available from your garden center, is your next line of defense. By placing the netting over the plants, you protect the plant from flying insects, mice and other varmints. Netting is the preferred preventative for vegetables such as cabbage, lettuce and other leafy produce.

Protecting young vegetable plants from worms and slugs can be accomplished by using old soda pop bottles. These can be either the single serve or the two liter type. Simply cut out the top and bottom of the bottle and place around the plant.

Another method of organic pest control is companion planting. By planting annuals such as marigolds and California poppies in and among your vegetable crop will help attract beneficial insects to your garden. These beneficial insects, like the ladybug, eat not the plant, but other insects. Some plants, such as wormwood, give off an odor that many pests do not like and will cause them to go to someone else's garden.

Many organic gardeners plant hot peppers throughout their garden. The capsaicin in the pepper plants deters many insects from lighting on the plants near them. Using hot pepper sprays on the vegetable plants themselves will also send many bugs elsewhere for their dinner. Hot peppers should not be planted near vegetables such as melons, because they may pick up the flavor of the pepper.

Another trick to try, especially for aphids, is a mixture of water and dish soap or other detergent. Spray the leaves of the plants lightly and it should destroy the little annoying insects.

It may be easier to just grab a bottle of pesticide from the store shelf, but for the healthiest, purest, freshest tasting vegetables, organic is the way to go. You may have to put forth a tad bit more effort, but when you know you can safely grab that tomato off the vine and eat it right there, then you'll know why organic is the best way to go.

Contact Information

Gardening Know How
57 Wandle Ave
Bedford, OH 44146
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