A Farmer's Guide To Home Gardening. How To Establish and Manage Home Gardens
A Farmer's Guide To Home Gardening. How To Establish and Manage Home Gardens
A Farmer's Guide To Home Gardening. How To Establish and Manage Home Gardens
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All content following this page was uploaded by Immaculate Mugisa on 10 August 2016.
This work may be transmitted for non-commercial use and educational use within
Uganda with acknowledgement of the National Agricultural Research Organisation
(NARO), Uganda and Mukono Zonal Agricultural Research and Development
Institute (MUZARDI). For additional rights, please write to [email protected].
Acknowledgement
The production of this guide was facilitated by the Government of
Uganda, MAAIF, through the World Bank funded ATAAS project.
NARO-MUZARDI and the authors greatly acknowledge this support.
The authors would also like to thank the UAP farmers in Kampala,
Wakiso and Masaka, community leaders, schools, LG, Camp Green
International and KCCA’s agricultural production department, for
their collaboration. We are grateful for all the information they have
shared that has in one way or another contributed to the development
of this guide.
Introduction 1
Why home gardening 2
Characteristics of home gardening 3
Important things to consider 4
Types of home gardens, their establishment and management 6
• Food towers 6
• Sack and polythene gardens 8
• Container and box gardens 11
• Hanging gardens 13
• Ridges and flower beds 14
• Green houses 15
Get the best out of your home garden 15
How to make compost manure 16
Things to avoid 17
Success stories 18
Conclusion 19
• Good drainage
A farmer should ensure good drainage when using small gardens
e.g. sacks, buckets and food towers. Poor drainage will hinder
proper crop growth. For instance, soils that are too clayey should be
avoided or mixed with sand to improve drainage. Stones should also
be placed in the center and/or at the bottom of food towers, sack and
container gardens to facilitate drainage.
Follow steps 1-7 to make as many bags as you need in your sack
garden. Space your sacks in the garden for easy movement when
watering your garden. That space also allows the crops on the
sides to get enough light for healthy growth.
• Green houses
A green house is a transparent structure used for growing tender plants
(e.g. vegetables) both in and out of season. When grown in a green
house, plants are protected from harsh conditions for instance very
high temperatures. Pests and diseases are also controlled. The amount
of water received by plants within the green house is also usually
controlled because the plants are watered.
Things to Avoid
To achieve the best out of home gardening, it should be done in a
controlled and disciplined manner. Farmers should guard against
the following:
• Using contaminated water sources: Use of contaminated (e.g.
dirty and filthy) water to irrigate crops can lead to health hazards
such as typhoid epidemics.
• Unnecessary cutting of trees to acquire space for production:
Farmers should always remember that trees are very important
in the ecosystem and therefore shouldn’t always be destroyed
to create space for crop production.
• Visual untidiness: A clean and organized environment is always
a target of cities and towns. Farmers should therefore guard
against visual untidiness and poor sanitation in their gardens.
Rubbish or waste should be properly disposed of or handled.
• Pollution of the environment and other resources: Farmers
should be conscious of environmental pollution from farm
or farm by-products. For instance, avoid unnecessary use of
chemicals for spraying crops planted in small gardens within
the homestead. Farmers are also encouraged to use manure
that is well decomposedto avoid the bad smell that pollutes the
air within the homestead.