I tried
planting
rose bushes, and before the beauties could even bloom the bushes had
become dried sticks without a touch of green.
I
tried planting corn, squash, beans and all sorts of vegetables and my
garden didn't even produce a single kernel. Not even enough food to
feed an ant. Believe me, I am sure that the ants and
bees were
laughing their heads off at me as they searched for food elsewhere.
They sure weren't finding anything to eat in MY YARD!
I
figured maybe because I was living in Georgia,
where red clay was a problem then I would try potted plants instead. I
tried flowers, and they died. A friend suggested that I try growing a
cactus, so I did, the cactus died. HOW CAN YOU KILL A CACTUS???
Someone
else suggested that I try an Aloe Plant, because these things were
indestructible. A friend gave me an aloe plant and the poor thing was
dead within 3 months. Needless to say my friends quit suggesting things
for me to grow. One even told me that if I got a fake
plastic plant, with my luck, it would probably die too!
I
so desperately wanted to see a little lively green plant growing
happily in my home. I wanted fresh vegetables for my table. All I found
instead was bad luck, wasted money, and a lot of ceremonies where I
would go outside, and somberly say goodbye to yet another dead plant.
Then
one day I discovered air plants!
I was
at a craft show, and a lady there was selling
air plants that were OH SO BEAUTIFUL!
She
said NO ONE could kill these plants. She told me that all they needed
was to be hung in the bathroom, and the steam from the shower would
provide all the nutrients they needed. NO DIRT! NO FERTILIZER! They
needed nothing except a moist environment that is provided in any
bathroom.
I
was as happy as an ant on a hill of honey when I got home with my new
plants. I purchased 3 beautiful air plants, hung them neatly in my
bathrooms and basked in the joy of FINALLY seeing a thing of beauty
growing in my home.
That
is until they died.
All
three of them, yes all three, died. Within a
month they were gone, dried up, dead, 3 more somber ceremonies. So much for my green thumb.
By this
time even I myself was too scared to get a
plastic plant. It would probably dry out and die on me too then I would probably have to
cut both of my thumbs off!
I
gave up on growing plants for years after that. The air plants were my
last attempt, and I had given up for good. I swore to myself I would
NEVER again try to grow another plant for as long as I live.
Then
one day I was
searching the internet for information about knitting. I stumbled
across a gardening forum where ladies were knitting plant pot covers.
One of the ladies had a picture of the most beautiful tree I had ever
seen in my life! A dark red Japanese Maple tree that had a breath
taking beauty that I had never seen before in my life.
I
HAD to have one!!
This
tree was so beautiful, I found myself craving
one for my own yard. I wanted one so badly that I spent months researching
Japanese Maples and how to grow them successfully.
Japanese
Maples, I found, are very expensive. I wanted to learn all I could
about them before I purchased my own, because I wanted to MAKE SURE
that my Japanese Maple would not die!
Yes,
silly me decided to try again, and this time not on a plant that costs
just a few dollars. I was getting brave and preparing myself to try and
grow a plant that costs over $200 dollars for the large ones.
I
read forums, looked up gardening articles, and tried to find as much
information as I could about Japanese Maples online.
Sadly,
the information I located dealt mostly with maintaining them once they
were already established and growing successfully. I needed information
on how to keep one from DYING before it got established in my yard and I could not locate this
information ANYWHERE!
I
checked out books
in the local library, and had no luck. I searched for days, hours at a
time, and could not find the information I needed.
I
decided to look for older gardening books, and THAT is when my search
was over! I found a slew of old gardening books written in the 1800's
that answered EVERY question I had about growing trees,
fruits, vegetables and flowers that I could dream of.
The
American Gardener is one of those books, and the main one that helped
me in learning everything I need to know about growing any plant I can
dream of under the sun!
The
American Gardner was written in 1854 by William Cobbett.
It is now in the public domain and has been converted into electronic
format for your enjoyment.

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The
American Gardener provides over 150 pages of helpful gardening how to
information, and tips that will help you grow plants with ease without
them dying like they did on me!
Even if
you're a professional gardener, you'll find
many tips to help better your growing success!
Here's
What You'll Find In The American Gardener:
- Choosing
the right location on your property for growing plants. You'll find in
depth information on slope of your land, and what spot is best for
growing successfully.
- Preparing
the soil properly to provide nutrition for healthy plants.
- Fencing
techniques for your garden. I LOVE this section. The author provides
humorous techniques for using hawthorn trees as fencing, to keep
troublesome lads from stealing their fruits and vegetables! You do not need to spend
hundreds for a chain link, wooden or brick fence. Use
hawthorn trees and with a little love and time you'll have a fence that
will make your neighbors green with envy!
- Designing,
or laying out, your garden so that it's pleasing to the eye yet
functional as well.
- You'll
learn how to make hotbeds, so that you can start your vegetables
earlier in the season and have edible produce as many as
15 days earlier
than normal! This can be a moneymaker if you sell produce. Be the first
in your neighborhood to have fresh green tomatoes and watermelons!
- Learn
the benefits of operating a hobby greenhouse, and how it can be
beneficially to your household.
- Learn
about true seeds and the soundness of seed. You'll learn how to test
seed before you plant them, to determine if you have good seed or bad.
Some seed will not grow if it's bad, and by using a
simple technique you can throw out the bad instead of laboring with
planting them only to find no lovely sprouts growing
where they were sowed.
- Learn
proper methods for saving and preserving seed. I find this the most fun
of gardening! I now save seed regularly and have a yard full of
beautiful blooms from seeds I have saved and sown.
- Learn
proper sowing methods to improve your seeds germination rate, and to
ensure healthy plants. Proper spacing and depth can mean success or
failure in the garden!
- American
Gardener provides proper transplanting methods, to ensure your plants
survival when moving from one area to another. This is the chapter that
covers the information I was looking for, to ensure my Japanese Maples
survival. I now have two Japanese Maples
growing successfully in my yard, and what beauty they both bring!
- Cultivating
your garden properly and methods for tilling, trenching and sowing to
ensure your gardens success.
- Learn
propagating methods so that you can grow many more plants from just one
stock plant. Learn propagating from cuttings, by grafting, by using
stock tress, by budding and by layering. All of these
are easy and fun methods that you and your family are sure to enjoy!
- There
is a nice section on growing grapes in minimum space while producing so
many grapes that it'll make your mouth water!
- Learn
how to successfully grow 81 different vegetables and herbs, 26 tasty
fruits and nuts and the most popular flowers and shrubs with the most
gorgeous blooms!
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You
are sure to love the information, guidance and
tips provided in American Gardener!
I have
used this
information for myself, and now have a yard full of beautiful trees,
flowers and plants instead of a mass plant graveyard!
This
type of information has helped me in so many ways. I now have 5 rose
bushes growing successfully in my yard including the coveted Don Juan
rose that now grows below a beautiful catalpa tree.
This
past spring I planted a successful vegetable
garden that provided enough produce to feed 5 families
for 2 months
and provide many bags for our freezers! My second fall garden was
planted just last week and is already sprouting many tiny plants for a
second harvest. All this was planted on a piece of plot that measures
not more than 20 feet by 40 feet!
I
had so many cucumbers growing that I could not even can them all I had
to give them away! My zucchini's were so huge that they had to be
shared with my in laws and my mother, because we could
not eat them as fast as they grew.
My
flowerbed has lavender, dianthus, clematis,
daisies and many odd plants growing beautifully.
My
verbena has taken over our drive; it's outgrown
its bed!
I
now have 2
Japanese Maples
growing successfully. One a glowing embers the other the coveted
bloodgood (the most beautiful tree on the planet in my opinion).
I
have hundreds of boxwood that I propagated from cuttings, growing
successfully beside my cuttings beds. My Azaleas are rooting
successfully now, and they
are LIVING!
I
have come a long way from where I could not even keep an air plant
alive, to where I am now growing plants with no roots in just a box of
peat moss and sand!
My
success is thanks to books like the American
Gardener.
All
the information you'll need to get started is provided in the American
Gardener, no matter what type of growing success you have had in the
past you'll find tips and techniques to improve your growing success in
this manual!
You too
can grow successfully as I have, by
increasing your knowledge and putting these methods into practice today!
SAY
NO to dying plants and SAY YES to success now!
Order your
copy for just $37.00 $9.97, download immediately and get
started TODAY!
Just
click on the button below

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The
Essential Guide to
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Here are
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-How to plan your Organic Vegetable Garden
-Growing your Organic Vegetable Garden
-Irrigation of your Organic Vegetable Garden
-Why grow an Organic Herb Garden
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-Organic Garden Fertilizers
-Organic Pest Control
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Growing Bonsai
Bonsai are miniature trees
grown
in pots. The aim of bonsai culture is to develop a tiny tree that has
all the elements
of a large tree growing in a natural setting. This look is achieved,
principally, by branch and root pruning and shaping, but other factors
are also
important. The texture of the trunk, its look of age, the moss and the
under
plantings in the container — all contribute to the illusion
of a miniature tree
as it is seen in nature.
Bonsai, as an art form, stems
from ancient oriental culture. It originated in China and was developed
by the Japanese.
In the 13th century, the Japanese collected and potted wild trees that
had been
dwarfed by nature. These naturally formed miniatures were the first
bonsai.
When
demand for the
small trees outstripped the supply, Japanese gardeners began to train
bonsai from native trees. They shaped the trees to give them the
illusion of age and naturalness. Over the years, the Japanese devised
standards of shape and form, which gradually began the classic bonsai
styles.
American bonsai are much freer in concept and style than Japanese
bonsai. American bonsai growers have recognized that the horticultural
and aesthetic rules are important, but are specifically aimed at
Japanese culture. Because of this, Americans have taken oriental styles
and applied them to plants never grown by the Japanese.
Yours for free
|
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So what
are you waiting for? Start planting today!
Happy
Planting,
It's Easy to Order...
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The Button Below To
Order!

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