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Please feel free to publish the following article (in its entirety) in your  
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Keeping a Journal for Garden Planning 
By Monica Resinger
_http://homemakersjournal.com_ (http://homemakersjournal.com) 
 
This is the time of year when the seed and plant catalogs come pouring in  
and we can browse through them and start dreaming up our gardens for the 
current 
 year. A little planning will help you get what you want out of your garden 
and  save you some time, money and frustration. A garden journal can be a very  
valuable tool when planning your garden. You can keep your garden journal in 
a  spiral bound notebook, or anything that appeals to you. The bookstores have 
 journals made especially for your garden if you want to get fancy. 
 
The first thing you want to do when planning your garden is to figure out  
what you want out of it. A great way to do this is to ask yourself some  
questions and take note in your journal. Some questions to ask yourself are: 
 
~ Do you want fresh vegetables on the dinner table through summer, or do  you 
want more than that for canning or freezing? 
 
~ Would you like some fresh herbs to compliment those vegetables, make  
herbal teas or to give as gifts? 
 
~ Do you want your yard to be colorful with seasonal flowers and would you  
like extras for cutting and putting in vases to decorate your home? 
 
~ Do you want your flower beds to have flowers, vegetables, herbs and  fruit, 
or only flowers? 
~ Is there some new plant you want to grow? 
~  Where will you plant all that you want to grow? 
 
~ What style of garden do you want--cottage, formal, informal, etc.? 
 
~ Do you want to save a little money by starting seeds, or do you want to  
save a little time by purchasing plants? 
 
~ How many plants will you need for a certain area? 
 
~ Do you have time to take care of all that you want out of the garden? 
 
A way to get ideas for your dream garden is to find pictures in magazines  or 
catalogs that appeal to you. You can paste these pictures into your journal,  
or keep them in a folder nearby. When driving around town, look at others' 
yards  and try to remember what you liked about them. Take notes on what 
appeals 
to  you. 
 
Once you know what you want by asking yourself the questions above and  
taking note on what appeals to you, you get to make the decisions of which  
plants 
to grow. This is where the catalogs can be a valuable tool. You can also  use 
gardening books. The catalogs and gardening books will list plant names,  
whether or not it will grow in your zone, plant size, plant care and other  
information such as flower color. 
 
Once you have planned which plants you are going to grow where, you'll need  
to purchase the seeds or wait until the nurseries start selling plants. You 
can  also put a plant order in through a catalog and they will ship them to you 
at  your planting date. This can be very convenient. 
 
If you are going to start seeds, it's wise to figure out starting dates and  
write them onto your calendar or into your garden journal. To figure out when 
to  start seeds, find out the number of weeks for germination time on the seed 
 packet and count back that amount from your last frost date. 
 
Your journal can be a valuable tool next year when making plans. Don't  limit 
yourself to only writing in your journal now. You can also keep notes  
through the year on how well certain varieties of plants did for you, new 
plants  to 
try, and anything else that will help you in your gardening efforts. Writing  
and reading your journal adds another fun dimension to gardening--try it, I  
think you'll like it! 
 
Monica is the founder Homemaker's Journal E-publications, the growing home  
of many fun and informative home and garden e-books, tip sheets, articles and  
more!  _http://homemakersjournal.com/_ (http://homemakersjournal.com/) 
Get a  FREE Slowcooker Recipe E-book when you subscribe to Monica's FREE 
e-zine for  homemakers!  To subscribe and receive instructions for picking up 
your 
FREE  e-book, just send a blank e-mail to:  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) 
Feel  free to publish this article as long as the above bylines & this note 
are  included; notification at [EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) 
 would be  appreciated.
 
 



**************Start the year off right.  Easy ways to stay in shape.     
http://body.aol.com/fitness/winter-exercise?NCID=aolcmp00300000002489


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