Stock Lawnmower Parts For Greater Availability Of Lawnmower

Depending on the type of your lawnmower, you will need to stock different parts in your house. It may be possible to get these parts off the shelf from your friendly neighborhood dealer. But to ensure continued availability you need to have these parts with you, where you can get it easily. You will be able to save a Saturday, when you normally mow the lawn. These parts are not costly and one will always be able to afford the investment in the lawnmower parts.

Parts For Gas Engine lawnmower

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The Portable Perennial Garden

I currently rent my house and while I’m planning on buying later this year, I can’t refrain from obtaining new and interesting perennial plants right now.  After all, it is spring out there and new plants have always been a major part of my spring activities.  But, what can you do when you have a rented property and you’re planning on moving.

This afternoon, I decided to do some planting but I ran out of both pots and space to put them.  There was a narrow strip along the side of the house that promised both shade and good visibility.  The barbeque sat there along with a few other tools but these were all quickly moved into the garage.  To make good gardening use of this space, I spread out black plastic bags to stop weeds or grass from growing and then set my new perennial pots out on the plastic.  Leaving the plants in the pots, I arranged them as if I were planting them; tall plants to the back against the house siding, gold leaved next to dark green, and short plants to the front etc.   Next I filled between all the pots with peat moss.  The peat will keep the plant upright and protect the pots from drying out.  When viewed from standing up, the pots disappear under the peat and the garden looks like it was planted.  All I have to do is keep the peat moss damp and the plants will grow into a perennial garden.

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Hydroponic Plant Systems What, No Dirt?

Simply put, hydroponics is the growing of plants without soil. The word “hydroponics” comes from the Greek word hydro, which means “water” and ponos, which means “labor or water-working.”

Typical Dirt Gardening:
All plant leaves need light, oxygen and carbon dioxide. Plant root systems require water, nutrients and oxygen. When plants are grown normally (in soil) water takes nutrients from the soil and carries them to the plant roots. The water and nutrients are taken up by the roots to feed plant growth. Soil drainage then allows water to be replaced by air in the gaps between soil grains. This supplies the roots with oxygen.

Hydroponic Gardening:
In hydroponic plant systems, you dissolve the nutrients in water. Soil is replaced with a “growing medium” – a soil substitute – that holds the roots and supplies them with water, nutrients and oxygen. You can deliver the nutrient solution a couple of ways: You can drip feed it to each plant, or you can flood the root chamber, then drain it out. These methods require a pump and timer to circulate the nutrients through the roots. You can also grow the plant roots in the air by spraying them with a fine mist of nutrient solution, or grow them by aerating the solution under each root mass with an air pump.

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