This bundle includes 2 books in 1
① Raised Bed Gardening for DummiesDo you have problems growing your vegetables? Have you heard about raised gardening, and are you interested in discovering more about it? If yes, keep reading.Standard gardens are lovely, yet there's something to be stated for raised bed gardens-- it enables you to grow more food in less space, customize the soil precisely to your requirements, and reduces the amount of space for weeds to grow wild.
Growing vegetables in raised beds makes gardening a pleasure. With limited time and space, you can grow an abundance of food in a small area. The benefits are numerous; fewer weeds and pests, better drainage, better soil, no compacting of the soil, less pain potential for you, the gardener, to name but a few. Your friends will envy your neat, attractive garden and harvest of healthy, tasty vegetables.
Raised vegetable gardening, because the soil is raised above the ground, doesn't call for toiling since soil compaction is already considerably lowered.
Raised veggie gardening allows us to plant very early every period since, unlike the conventional gardening technique, raised beds can warm faster after winter months, and as a result of its quick-draining pipes attributes, raised beds also enable early planting after a wet period.
Also, raised vegetable gardening is much more systematic than the normal one, which enables us to optimize the planting area.
Lastly, the benefit that we obtain from raised gardening is that, when properly designed and created, it's even more pleasing to the eyes given that it imitates a landscape in your residential property, not just like a typical garden.
This book covers:
- Building Structures
- Soil
- Planting
- Growing And Harvesting
- Measures and Number of Plants
...And Much More!
② Hydroponics Garden SecretHave you ever heard the word "hydroponics"? Maybe do you have some vague notions about it, but you are interested in discovering more? If yes, this is the right book for you.Hydroponics is a way to grow plants in a nutrient-rich, water-based solution. The roots get supported by using a medium like vermiculite, peat moss, clay pellets, rockwool, or perlite. The logic behind hydroponics is letting the roots come in contact with the solution. The plants also have access to plenty of oxygen they need.
The root system of the plants will have less stress than when they are grown traditionally, since they don't have to find food from the soil, and they can convert the nutrients into energy a lot faster. This will result in more significant production in a short amount of time.
Since plants are grown without soil, you have to maximize the root's nutrient absorption. This means the way you give the roots their nutrients is extremely important.
This book includes:
- What Is Hydroponic Gardening?
- Hydroponics Gardening Vs. Aquaponics
- Hydroponics Vegetable Gardening
- Hydroponics Grow System
- Which Plants Can Be Grown with Hydroponics
...And much more!
Hydroponics has had a place in various civilizations throughout history. The floating gardens in China and Mexico, along with the hanging gardens in Babylon, are a few examples of hydroponic culture. Nevertheless, there have been large strides made through the years to this part of agriculture.
During the past century, horticulturists and scientists have been experimenting with various hydroponic ways. Hydroponics was used in World War II to give troops who were stationed on various islands in the Pacific where food wouldn't grow easily with produce they were able to grow themselves.
So, interested in Gardening through Hydroponics Method?
Ready to get started? Click "Buy Now"!