Sometimes I remember the Minimalists are good . There are clock time I just require to pack up everything and send it off to the thrift store , leaving only a potted plant , a laptop computer and an age-old vase .
Simplicity sounds good in a complicated world . One good Christian Bible on the bedside table , one coffee soft touch , and just one wife – gross !
Are you overwhelmed when you look at your garden ? Do you have raised beds to fix , a compost tea drinking fountain that is n’t getting used , a shed full of gardening junk and a broken tiller that is begging for repair ?

In a humankind that want to trade you stuff and nonsense , sometimes it ’s easy to suffer track of what you really need to get a business done . Gardening does n’t have to be expensive or complicated . Today I ’ll share five direction to keep garden round-eyed – perhaps you ’ll find it enliven .
1. Keep Irrigation Simple
There ’s nothing awry with like drip irrigation – but I do n’t utilise it . I do n’t like take in to blame up drip tape , I do n’t like lot with leaks , and I do n’t like hoeing around things . I ’ve gut through drip line of descent before , and I ’ve had squirrel chew holes in the hosepipe .
If you need irrigation , it ’s hard to go incorrect with simple overhead irrigation on stand pipes . We buried some PVC in the garden with Rainbird sprinkler heads on tops of PVC piping hose - clamp to re - debar and – voila – we could turn a handle and make it rain down .
Alternately , use broad works spacing and you could mostly garden with the rainfall . Rainfall is the minimalist approach to gardening and I highly urge learning to use it well .

2. Use Simple Tools
There ’s nothing likea good former - fashioned hoe , especially one that ’s shrewd and weight correctly . I buy used old hoe heads from ebay and put them on unexampled handle , then entreat them back into military service in the garden . Other elementary tools for the garden include a spade , a dig crotch , and , of course , a machete . My bike hoe are much - loved .
But you only “ require ” a wheel hoe if you have a big garden . For a small backyard plot , a good previous - fashioned hoe ca n’t be bushed .
3. Make Simple Garden Beds
No wood , no problem ! Just make bottom in the ground , like this .
Or , if you have more space , just make dewy-eyed row gardens .
It ’s really soft and you do n’t have to feed or water much .

I do n’t irritate mulch my rows , as gathering mulch and throwing it around direct a mass of time and effort . Keep it unsubdivided !
4. Use Simple Old-Fashioned Amendments
Like I portion out in my foresightful - grade demonstration film7 Ways to bung Your Garden for Free , you do n’t have to get complicated with your fertilizers . Ashes , compost , manure , compost tea … it can be simple .
Compost is the very safe thing you’re able to add to your garden . I wrotean intact Scripture on bare composting .
5. Put Your Garden Nearby
This is something we often overlook . If possible , put your garden where you ’ll see it and spend time in it . Out of ken = out of idea . It ’s much simpler to walk right out your doorway into the garden , rather than trekking to the back corner of your cubic yard . If you ’re near the garden , you ’ll take better care of it .
These are just a few thoughts . Our garden is a serious family food garden and we have to keep it simple . Buying earthboxes or building aquaponics systems or trying to garden in barrels or horse trough or whatever just does n’t jibe normal family homesteading biography . Keep it round-eyed , give your plants what they require and harvest lots of nutrient .
If childlike backyard Victory Gardens in the shite were good enough to get America through WWII , there ’s no penury to reinvent the rack . Keep it simple !

Minimalist , even .
Soil , water , a few dick and some trade union movement is all you take .
Keep this in mind : more food / less employment .
One of these sidereal day I trust to pen a account book on Minimalist Gardening . Stay tune .
Minimalist interior design image at top byMonoar Rahman RonyfromPixabay