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The Frugal Gardener
by Rachel Paxton
Description: Tips for gardening on a budget.
Gardening can be expensive. When you're on a tight budget,
garden projects seem to fall way to the bottom of your list of
spending priorities.
I love the outdoors. And I love spending time at home in our
yard. We've never been able to spend the kind of money I'd like
to for landscaping, but over the years we've found some ways to
make a little bit of money go quite far.
Shop end-of-season sales. It's easy to remember to do this when
shopping for clothes and other household items, but I forget the
same goes for plants. You can get a great deal on outdoor plants
and trees shopping at the end of the season. Even annuals that
are almost out of season are a good buy. They won't bloom again
until next year, but for the savings you're getting it's worth it
to plant them now and wait until next year to enjoy them. You
can also get a great deal on fruit trees at the end of the
season. Don't forget to check out the sidewalks of grocery
stores and neighborhood markets. They mark down the prices of
plants significantly at the end of the season.
Divide and transplant. It doesn't take long for plants to start
to take over your flower beds. I grow some herbs and daisies
that seem to creep inches through the flower bed each week.
Instead of letting plants like these take over the flower bed,
transplant them to another part of the yard. Flowers like
daisies are easy to dig out in big clumps and move around
wherever you want them. In several years time, the investment of
a few dozen flowers or flower bulbs can multiply into many times
the amount you recently purchased.
Give and receive. It's fun to trade plants with friends and
family. I've landscaped much of my yard this way. Iris bulbs
from one friend, grape vines from another, it adds up fast! And
all from people who were looking to get the excess plants out of
their yard. After your yard has had a few years to get
established, you will be able to share also. This is the best
way to plant your yard with no expense at all.
Look for unexpected opportunties. One of our neighbors gets free
sod from several local curb companies. After a job, they just
unload the sod at his house. When he doesn't have a need for the
sod, he gives it to us free of charge. We've put down several
hundred dollars worth of sod at no cost to us.
Creative container gardening. I like to plant in containers a
lot, but planters can be so expensive. Get creative about your
garden containers. People use wheel barrows, tool boxes, kitchen
sifters, colanders, old boots, children's wagons, baskets, and
many other things for creative container gardening. Just make
sure there is adequate drainage so the water can find its way
out. See http://www.gardenguides.com for more container
gardening ideas.
Weigh the alternatives. It's easy to get carried away in the
vegetable garden. I get all caught up in having a little of
this, and a little of that, often spending more than I had
intended to and growing vegetables that cost next to nothing at
the grocery store when they're in season. For example, green
peppers in season you can get for 4 or more for $1. That's maybe
not worth it to me to grow them. Tomatoes, on the other hand,
are definitely worth the effort and will save us a lot of money
throughout the summer.
You don't have to have a lot of money to have a nice garden. You
just have to be creative and look for opportunities. Make the
decision that you will only spend what you can afford, and you
will still end up with a beautiful yard you can be proud of.
Rachel Paxton is a freelance writer and mom who is the author of What's for Dinner?, an e-cookbook containing more than 250 quick easy dinner ideas. For more recipes, organizing tips, home decorating, crafts, holiday hints, and more, visit Creative Homemaking at http://www.creativehomemaking.com.