UF/IFAS
Okeechobee County
Extension
Service
458 Highway 98 North
Okeechobee, FL 34972-2578
Phone: (863) 763-6469
E- mail: dfculbert@ifas.ufl.edu
March 1, 2006
Feature Article - for release the week of March 5, 2006
Dan Culbert - Extension Horticulture Agent
Organic Gardening
Last week Okeechobee had a nice turnout at a farm field day. Varri Green Farm hosted farm visitors who wanted to learn a little bit about what it’s like to grow vegetables using natural fertilizers and least toxic pesticides. Over 20 persons attended, including our new University of Florida Vegetable specialist, Dr. Danielle Treadwell.
<>What do you envision when you hear the term "organic gardening"? Do you think of extremely large and beautiful fruits and vegetables free of pesticide residues and containing an abundance of vitamins and minerals or do you picture insect chewed leaves and fruit marred by worm holes. Today’s column comes from Dr. Bob Black, and is designed to clear up some confusion surrounding organic gardening.>Many of us have probably used a form of organic gardening without knowing it. The addition of manure or compost into a garden bed, the addition of peatmoss, ground bark or leaf mold to a planting mix, using bone meal to fertilize bulbs and squirting aphids off a plant with a hose are all forms of organic gardening.Both organic and conventional gardeners agree on the value of the addition of organic matter to the soil. Organic matter makes soil easy to work, increases its nutrient and water retention, improves soil atmosphere, promotes increased biological activity and adds nutrients to the soil. <>A major difference of opinion between conventional and natural gardening is with the method of supplying nutrients to the plant. The organic gardener uses only organic materials (e.g., animal manure, blood meal, cottonseed meal and wood ashes) while the conventional gardener uses inorganic materials (commercial fertilizer). Since organic fertilizers release nutrients very slowly, there is less chance of fertilizer burn. > <>However, the nutrient content of organic fertilizers is far less than that of commercial fertilizers, so large amounts of organic fertilizer are needed to do the job of a small amount of commercial fertilizer. Whether you apply an organic or commercial fertilizer, the plant roots absorb nutrients from both in the same elemental forms.The other major difference between organic and conventional gardening is the method of pest control: Organic gardeners do not use inorganic pesticides. Instead, they use natural forms of control.
I’ve placed more information on our Okeechobee web page, http://okeechobee.ifas.ufl.edu. If you need additional information on organic gardening, please email us at okeechobee@ifas.ufl.edu or call us at 863- 763-6469. Local residents can visit our local green market on Thursday evenings in downtown Okeechobee. Others can stop by our office at 458 Hwy 98 North in Okeechobee, and visit our Okeechobee County Master Gardeners from 1 to 5 PM on Tuesday afternoons. Happy Gardening!
Trade names, where used, are given for the purpose of providing specific information. They do not constitute an endorsement or guarantee of products named, nor does it imply criticism of products not named. The Florida Cooperative Extension Service - Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer authorized to provide research, educational information, and other services to individuals and institutions that function without regard to race, color, sex, age, handicap, or national origin. Florida Cooperative Extension Service / IFAS / University of Florida. Larry A. Arrington, Dean