Many gardeners are drawn to invest in a greenhouse to help extend their growing seasons. Not only does it give them the ability to control the growing environment—despite the extremes of weather—but also it helps them create a place for plants to thrive.
If you’ve already invested in a greenhouse, then odds are you did, like most hobbyists and commercial growers, to be able to control the environment inside for your plants’ sake.Though temperature is one of the variables greenhouse gardeners try to manage, the more intense summer heat can certainly make it a challenge—especially depending on your local climate.
Growing flowers for fun—or profit—is another popular greenhouse application.Your greenhouse can be used to nurture seedlings before being planted in an outdoor garden. Or your greenhouse can offer a controlled environment where you can tend to tropical blooms.
Making the most of your gardening efforts is important so you can increase the enjoyment and the profits—if you’re going that route—from your greenhouse. Essentially, the more success you have, the more you’ll want to grow!
Ensuring proper ventilation in your greenhouse is one of the most important concerns you’ll have since adequate and uniform air circulation is crucial to the success of your plants.Ventilation is a primary concern because without it the greenhouse can quickly become anoven in which no plant can survive.
More and more American households are discovering the benefits to growing their own vegetables at home. In just a five-year period, 17 percent more households—from 32 million in 2008 to 43 million in 2013—took to their backyards and community gardens to test their green thumbs, according to a special National Gardening Association report, Garden to Table: A 5-Year Look at Food Gardening in America.
Greenhouses were once the necessity for gardeners growing fragile flowers and plants. But with more than 42 million American households taking up food gardening, according to the National Gardening Association, many more gardeners are using greenhouses to extend the growing season.
Plunging temperatures and winter storms could threaten your plants if you’re not careful. But you can protect and extend the efforts of your green thumb this winter. Winterizing your greenhouse helps ensure your vegetables and flowers can survive and thrive despite the frightful weather outside. Follow these seven essential steps to help ward off everything from frost to pests this season:
Home gardens can range from small herb gardens to container gardens to larger backyard plots. But if you want to turn your gardening into a year-round activity, maybe it’s time you considered a greenhouse. More than 164 million American homeowners gardened in the span of a year, according to a recent study published in Greenhouse Management magazine.
As outdoor temperatures rise, so do the temperatures inside a greenhouse. Reduce greenhouse temperatures naturally this summer with greenhouse cooling systems and supplies. Excessive heat will probably damage or kill plants. Cool down crops naturally this summer with Gothic Arch Greenhouses Inc. greenhouse cooling systems.