Organic horticulture

Organic horticulture is the science and art of growing fruits, vegetables, flowers, or ornamental plants by following the essential principles of organic agriculture in soil building and conservation, pest management, and heirloom variety preservation.

The Latin words hortus (garden plant) and cultura (culture) together form horticulture, classically defined as the culture or growing of garden plants. Horticulture is also sometimes defined simply as “agriculture minus the plough.” Instead of the plough, horticulture makes use of human labour and gardener’s hand tools, although some small machine tools like rotary tillers are commonly employed now.

General
Mulches, cover crops, compost, manures, vermicompost, and mineral supplements are soil-building mainstays that distinguish this type of farming from its commercial counterpart. Through attention to good healthy soil condition, it is expected that insect, fungal, or other problems that sometimes plague plants can be minimized. However, pheromone traps, insecticidal soap sprays, and other pest-control methods available to organic farmers are also utilized by organic horticulturists.

Horticulture involves five areas of study. These areas are floriculture (includes production and marketing of floral crops), landscape horticulture (includes production, marketing and maintenance of landscape plants), olericulture (includes production and marketing of vegetables), pomology (includes production and marketing of fruits), and postharvest physiology (involves maintaining quality and preventing spoilage of horticultural crops). All of these can be, and sometimes are, pursued according to the principles of organic cultivation.

Organic horticulture (or organic gardening) is based on knowledge and techniques gathered over thousands of years. In general terms, organic horticulture involves natural processes, often taking place over extended periods of time, and a sustainable, holistic approach – while chemical-based horticulture focuses on immediate, isolated effects and reductionist strategies.

General principles
The main difference with organic farming lies in the fact that gardening, which may be just a recreational activity, is subject to other economic constraints than those of agriculture.

Compared to conventional gardening, the main differences relate to:

the suppression of chemical inputs: pesticides, herbicides, acaricides…, which in addition to pollution problems are an expensive expense. (The amateur gardener often has a tendency to force on the doses. It should be noted, however, that not all pesticides are accessible to home gardeners, as products sold in consumer retail chains are limited to less harmful.)
the biological approach has the advantage of limiting expenditure to a bare minimum, mainly tools and seeds. These can often be produced by the gardener himself.
the seeds should, in order to comply with the laws in force for organic farming, come from organic farming (the scope of these laws does not however cover the gardening activity for strictly personal use – to be verified).
for fertilization, the privileged use of compost, that is to say all crop residues or from the table (cut plants, residues vegetable consumption… except the bones that can however be crushed ).

Organic gardening systems
There are a number of formal organic gardening and farming systems that prescribe specific techniques. They tend to be more specific than, and fit within, general organic standards. Forest gardening, a fully organic food production system which dates from prehistoric times, is thought to be the world’s oldest and most resilient agroecosystem.

Biodynamic farming is an approach based on the esoteric teachings of Rudolf Steiner. The Japanese farmer and writer Masanobu Fukuoka invented a no-till system for small-scale grain production that he called Natural Farming. French intensive gardening and biointensive methods and SPIN Farming (Small Plot INtensive) are all small scale gardening techniques. These techniques were brought to the United States by Alan Chadwick in the 1930s. This method has since been promoted by John Jeavons, Director of Ecology Action. A garden is more than just a means of providing food, it is a model of what is possible in a community – everyone could have a garden of some kind (container, growing box, raised bed) and produce healthy, nutritious organic food, a farmers market, a place to pass on gardening experience, and a sharing of bounty, promoting a more sustainable way of living that would encourage their local economy. A simple 4′ x 8′ (32 square feet) raised bed garden based on the principles of bio-intensive planting and square foot gardening uses fewer nutrients and less water, and could keep a family, or community, supplied with an abundance of healthy, nutritious organic greens, while promoting a more sustainable way of living.

Organic gardening is designed to work with the ecological systems and minimally disturb the Earth’s natural balance. Because of this organic farmers have been interested in reduced-tillage methods. Conventional agriculture uses mechanical tillage, which is plowing or sowing, which is harmful to the environment. The impact of tilling in organic farming is much less of an issue. Ploughing speeds up erosion because the soil remains uncovered for a long period of time and if it has a low content of organic matter, the structural stability of the soil decreases. Organic farmers use techniques such as mulching, planting cover crops, and intercropping, to maintain a soil cover throughout most of the year. The use of compost, manure mulch and other organic fertilizers yields a higher organic content of soils on organic farms and helps limit soil degradation and erosion.

Other methods such as composting or vermicomposting can also be used to supplement an existing garden. These practices are ways of recycling organic matter into some of the best organic fertilizers and soil conditioner. Vermicompost is especially easy. The byproduct is also an excellent source of nutrients for an organic garden.

Topics
Below are references to articles about topics that are essential for organic cultivation of gardens.

soil conditions
pH
soil type
soil Profile
Structure (Soil)
Texture (soil)
soil Test
Soil’s life
soil Destruction
Fertility (soil)
green manure

Technique
Grave free garden
Accompanying Plant
Succession Planting
Crop rotation
Cover crop
Weed control methods (see also ‘weeds’ below)
Drying bed (water-saving cultivation)

Props
Tillage
lawn care
Pruning

Crop
Seed molding;
Stikling Propagation
Sharing (plant breeding)
inoculation

Animals in the garden

Crops

The ecological ornamental garden
List of flower plants
Water plants
Flower album (illustrations of many ornamental flowers)
Specialbed
Organic lawn care

Pests and diseases
Biological pest control
Physiological plant diseases (due to environmental conditions such as weather conditions, nutritional disorders etc.)
deficiency Diseases
Plant diseases (due to fungi, viruses, bacteria, etc.)

Pest control approaches
Differing approaches to pest control are equally notable. In chemical horticulture, a specific insecticide may be applied to quickly kill off a particular insect pest. Chemical controls can dramatically reduce pest populations in the short term, yet by unavoidably killing (or starving) natural control insects and animals, cause an increase in the pest population in the long term, thereby creating an ever-increasing problem. Repeated use of insecticides and herbicides also encourages rapid natural selection of resistant insects, plants and other organisms, necessitating increased use, or requiring new, more powerful controls.

In contrast, organic horticulture tends to tolerate some pest populations while taking the long view. Organic pest control requires a thorough understanding of pest life cycles and interactions, and involves the cumulative effect of many techniques, including:
Allowing for an acceptable level of pest damage
Encouraging predatory beneficial insects to flourish and eat pests
Encouraging beneficial microorganisms
Careful plant selection, choosing disease-resistant varieties
Planting companion crops that discourage or divert pests
Using row covers to protect crop plants during pest migration periods
Rotating crops to different locations from year to year to interrupt pest reproduction cycles
Using insect traps to monitor and control insect populations

Each of these techniques also provides other benefits, such as soil protection and improvement, fertilization, pollination, water conservation and season extension. These benefits are both complementary and cumulative in overall effect on site health. Organic pest control and biological pest control can be used as part of integrated pest management (IPM). However, IPM can include the use of chemical pesticides that are not part of organic or biological techniques.

Impact on the global food supply
One controversy associated with organic food production is the matter of the amount of food produced per acre. Even with good organic practices, organic agriculture may be five to twenty-five percent less productive than conventional agriculture, depending on the crop.

Much of the productivity advantage of conventional agriculture is associated with the use of nitrogen fertilizer. However, the use, and especially the overuse, of nitrogen fertilizer has negative effects such as nitrogen runoff harming natural water supplies and increased global warming.

Organic methods have other advantages, such as healthier soil, that may make organic farming more resilient, and therefore more reliable in producing food, in the face of challenges such as climate change.

As well, world hunger is not primarily an issue of agricultural yields, but distribution and waste.

Source from Wikipedia