RE: The Step By Step Method Of Approach To Ensure Good Times In Agricultural Cultivation || The Planting Techniques Used In Jute Vegetable Seed Cultivation 🌱☘️🌱🌿🌱

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Thank you for your post – an interesting approach to soil cultivation!
About three years ago, I redesigned a section of my garden and started growing vegetables there. At first, I didn’t use any additional soil. The first year went fairly well, except for a few persistent pests that attacked the roots and destroyed some plants just before they were ready to be harvested.
The following year, hardly anything grew.
Now, I have three compost bins where I collect all of our organic waste. I regularly mix the soil with homemade compost – and I’m truly amazed at how something small can grow into something so vibrant and full of life. It’s a real joy to watch this process unfold.



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@vanje Wow. Thank you for the follow and the support too my friend. First and foremost, I would like to say that I like the spirit that split out what is really deeply in them. There are so many people out there that are also into farming but they have no courage to comment but I would like to say that when you try a method and it doesn't work for you and you come across article or vlog or something. You can as well comment and make it official by explaining and coming out straight what has been happening to you on your farm or your garden so that there will be a lot of discussions along the line with respect to corrections implementations and also Good Farm techniques along the way.

What you said is actually right on or gardening. There are so many approaches that people make that ought to have been updated. Just like in my own case like I said earlier when you practice your own farming activities on a piece of land or using a pot or a sack or a bucket or keg cultivate your crop you need to turn the soil halfway and replace the soil with a fresh new ones and if possible you can also add your organic manure which is of different types. But I prefer the use of animal droppings and waste because it dwell inside the soil and stay with a lot of nutrients for more than six months. While some other farmers even double check on their soil every 6 months. And they change them into new ones. You see that they are always cultivating green vegetables, oranges, mango,apple, sugarcane, potato, curry leaves, plantain, tomato,banana, Maize and so many other foodstuffs.

the pest are sometimes very frustrating, there are always some pest that fight deeply in the soil. The dig into the soil and keep eating up the root of the cultivated crops and that is why mix cropping system is always allowed. When you notice this, you can always interchange your crop just like what you said, you may plant African spinach seed along with the Jute vegetable seed, or Maize 🌽🌽 corn with Okro they will grow alongside with each other without disturbing one another and one May fix another problem you are already facing on the farm or in your garden before the previous farming season.

Here is my YouTube channel as well.
https://youtube.com/@mattsanthonyit1122?si=Riecr8hFWfT0IyYA

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Thank you for your thoughtful reply – I really enjoyed reading it! 🌱
I absolutely agree with you, especially when it comes to using animal droppings as fertilizer. In my experience, horse manure works wonders in the garden and truly enriches the soil for months. I’ve been using it myself and have seen great results.

However, here in Germany – at least in the region where I live – it's not always easy to get good quality manure. Many small farms have closed down over the years, and that makes access to natural fertilizers quite limited. So whenever I manage to get hold of some, I feel lucky!

I also really appreciate your encouragement to share experiences openly – that's such a valuable point. Gardening is not just about growing plants, but also about learning from one another and improving together 🌿🌾

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Thank you so much my friend. I know some people here on Hive who are into agriculture but not too bold to show up their step by step method of approach to crops and animals just like I always do. But I always encourage them on discord channel and through emails. I love to use organic manure because they are the best in production of crops. When you use organic manure to cultivate MAIZE 🌽🌽 for instance, it grows thrice the size, which I have done so many practical experiments on that and other crops. So it very effective.

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You're absolutely right, my friend. I truly believe that whatever Mother Earth gives us for energy, she gladly accepts back – even in the form of waste – to return it to us as new life and nourishment. 🌍✨

It's a beautiful, natural cycle. Sadly, many try to rush this process with chemicals, not realizing that what grows unnaturally fast often becomes harder for us, the consumers, to process – and in the end, more harm is done than good.

Organic farming might take a little more patience, but it offers something so much deeper – true quality, sustainability, and connection with the earth.

Thank you for inspiring these thoughts again πŸ™πŸŒ±

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