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Money Saving Tips For Gardeners

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By

Kate O'Raghallaigh

From the Fool blog

Local Police Station Is Useless!

Published in Money Saving Tips on 4 July 2008

Gardening doesn't have to cost the earth. Here are five tips which will save you money...

What domestic activity burns as many calories as two games of badminton? I’ll give you a hint: it’s the same pastime that burns twice as many calories as a half hour run?

Still stumped? It’s only gardening!

‘Tis true. According to research form health insurer Bupa, not only are gardening activities such as seed planting and lawn mowing good for the environment (and, as many would add, the ‘soul’), but they can also form a part of that vital summer exercise regime!

Don’t ditch the gym in favour of lawn mowing just yet, though.

Whether you are a novice gardener, a green fingered god/goddess or simply want to have a pretty windowsill, here are some foolish tips to save you some pennies this summer.

Starting out

There are also a host of websites out there that can help you ease your way into the gardening world. The Royal Horticultural Society has a very useful advice section which includes a number of downloadable leaflets on various aspects of gardening.

If you’re a bit of an eager beaver, however, it’s worth being a bit cautious when making that first stop to the garden centre.

Yes, those beautiful makepiece gardens are certainly a dream to look at – and not to prune anyone’s confidence if you’re new to the game – but it is unlikely that purchasing everything you think looks pretty on the display will have the desired effect in your own garden.

It may also prove pretty painful on the old bank balance.

Why pay expensive prices when you can wrangle lots of things you need for nothing more than a bit of friendly research:

1. As my fellow Fool Malcolm Wheatley pointed out in ‘Ten Ways To Cut Your Gardening Costs’, cuttings are a great way to nab the plants or flowers that you have seen in full growth, and really like. So get snipping – but make sure you ask first!

2. Gardening clubs/societies – there are a number of online communities where members swap plants and seeds with each other. These forums are also great for gardening tips. Try the following:

3. While fashioning your own pitchfork might prove a bit tricky, there are other things that can be made at home. A popular money saving method is making seedling pots from newspaper – there’s a useful demonstration of how to do it here. (Note: if you replace the demonstrator’s seedling tray with an old meat tray, you’ve saved yourself even more money!)

Compost

Why buy bags of the stuff when you can make your own? All you need is a container, which you can buy from a shop or your local council. The Foolish option would of course, be to make a compost bin yourself – all you need is some chicken wire, some stakes and some cardboard.

Homecomposting.org.uk is a great composting website which offers advice on how to make your own container, as well as tips on what you can include in your compost.

A bit of home brewing

You probably didn’t know this, but you can actually make your own weed killer. According to The Vinegar Institute, a simple spray of white distilled vinegar on weeds will do the job, although there are many other recipes online, a lot of which seem to involve mixing vinegar with dishwasher liquid.

The institute’s website also offers a range of other uses for vinegar in the garden, which include a recipe for plant nutrient solution. That’s certainly cheaper than forking out for a packet of the stuff from Homebase!

Contrary to what you may have gathered from gardening shows on TV, creating and maintaining a garden doesn’t have to break the bank. With a little know how, you can make extra use of things that are likely to be lying round your house anyway.

Happy gardening!

More: Ten Ways To Cut Your Gardening Costs | Cheap Gardening Tips For Beginners

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

Hanala1 06 Jul 2008, 6:14am

Some months ago my garden was smashed by high winds, which left me wondering how I on Earth I was going to afford to replace everything.

Luckily, earlier this year I joined a recycling group called Freecycle on the internet and I have now rebuilt my garden with all kinds of plants, plus pots as well as acquiring a garden table, bench and chairs...all at no cost!

Freecycle have groups all over the country, so give it a go and join one now.

ITexpert17 06 Jul 2008, 10:29am

"gardening activities such as seed planting and lawn mowing good for the environment" ?
Good for the environment? Not the kind of lawn mowing many people do where they use a petrol mower! Luckily they poison themselves first as petrol mowers emit toxic gases! Buy an eletric one, I just bought a Boss Li-ion rechargable one and it's amazing!

ejkilby1 06 Jul 2008, 11:16am

hmm.. I love the way people seem to believe that electric powered things are good for the environment, what about the dirty great power station that created that electricity!

A self powered one is the only thing that whould be good for the environment, surely!

MadMacLeods 06 Jul 2008, 12:48pm

Well ITexpert17,

When you have finishes your lawn...dont put you smugness or your electric mower away ....come and use your electric mower on my acre of garden. Thanks for your civilized good wishes for my health while using my mower!

aquamanx 06 Jul 2008, 1:26pm

Lucky you, MadMacLeods, having an acre of lawn to enjoy. Why not adopt a rescue donkey or goat – you can save a neglected animal who'll trim and fertilise your lawn all for free. That way you get a healthy lawn, offset carbon, good karma, and a happy saved animal all in one!

mishko22 06 Jul 2008, 2:25pm

Yeah, right aquamanx - and no plants!

RosemaryPettit 06 Jul 2008, 3:28pm

Leonardslee garden in Sussex has a herd (if that's the right collective noun) of wallabies which mow the grass, never need pay or holidays, fertilise at the same time and are self-generating. The garden is full of trees and the smaller ones are protected by netting but there were also a lot of rabbits about.

I'd also endorse Freecycle, swapping plants with friends, car boot sales for tools, plant sales at charity fairs and at fetes, and picking up plants for sale off tables by garden gates in the country. A friend has an arrangement with a friendly flower and plant shop to relieve them of plants past their sell-by date.

For my very small urban garden I bought an expensive but neat galvanised iron compost bin with heavy rubber lid. Nine years later it is still going strong, looks acceptable, fits into a corner and does the business. Composting is one of the best bits of gardening once you've started on it. It presses all the right buttons.

But for real economy in the plant line nothing beats growing plants from seed.
And of course you can always ask for a garden token for Christmas or birthdays.

ACTed 06 Jul 2008, 4:24pm

Rosemary, the collective for wallabies is a 'mob' - and in Australia they are well-known for backyard destruction! They seem to be particularly fond of my mothers Daphne.

RosemaryPettit 06 Jul 2008, 8:14pm

Interesting...didn't see many daphnes at Leonardslee...
But really these UK-naturalised wallabies looked well fed and pampered, not to say effete. Some of them were even albinos, lolling around, nibbling a bit of grass and having their picture taken. The Leonardslee custodians were proud of them and of their grass manicuring capabilities.
Probably too fat to know what a mob is.

hungary 06 Jul 2008, 10:39pm

Just for interest: goats are mainly browsers (think hedges and trees), sheep are mainly grazers. Some geese are good for keeping grass down, if your visitors like being chased around by hissing geese. Horses are picky eaters, unless you strip graze them.
Hand powered lawn mowers are great, but have yet to find one that actually works in England. For some reason they do not seem to work on my lawn. Guinea pigs are good actually if you keep moving them around.

RosemaryPettit 07 Jul 2008, 11:27am

Why not look in Garden Which? for advice on lawn mowers? Libraries usually keep back copies of the Which? magazines.

Yes, I've had friends who have relied on guinea pigs to mow the lawn. But you can't just let them run free and they need careful maintenance.

reallynotstupid 13 Jul 2008, 1:58am

Good to see freecycle got a mention right at the start.

If like me you are disabled (or elderly) it might be worth contacting your local council or a disability info office/centre etc. for info on any organisations that can help with gardening in your area.

My garden wasn't over run just a bit of a mess but with rheumatiod arthritis trying to keep it just tidy was a painful misery.

I could'nt really afford the £15.00/20.00 an hour I was quoted, but reckoned I'd have to manage somehow. Then of course over a period of time several gardeners who agreed to do the work never turned up. So I was getting worried about what to do.

OK so I'm rambling, but in my area a couple of non profit making organisations started up. For a small monthly charge I now have 3-4 people turn up and spend about 2 hours working on my gardens.

So for a lot less than one person for an hour or so I get 3-4 which I reckon out as around 6-8 hours work! Also there is always a qualified gardener and the others are volunteers or students.

Sorry this does'nt help everyone but it might help some who are least able to manage on their own.

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