Tip! Weed control is
essential in successful vegetable gardening as weeds can rob cultivated
plants of water, nutrients and light. It is important that the soil is
hoed or cultivated after each rain or irrigation to kill the weeds that
have sprouted.
If you are obsessed with gardening and anything that
even remotely involves plants, and their well being, then you are probably
a closet horticulturist. A horticulturist being classified as a person who
grows and cultivates plants, amongst other things. In other words a
gardener right? After all what's in a name? A Rose by any other name is
still a Rose. Clichéd words yes, but true nevertheless. The only
difference between a horticulturist and a gardener is the fancy title,
(and the money of course!) They get paid in money, you get paid in blooms.
So, you can now go around telling your friends that you are deep into the
study of horticulture!
What is horticulture? It's a funny thing really when
you get right down to the roots of it. Horticulture by its very definition
is the cultivation of a garden, or in other words, the science (or art) of
cultivation of vegetables, fruits, plants, and flowers. A horticultural
plant is defined as one that has been produced by cultivation, and not one
that has grown without a helping hand.
Tip! Garden plants
attract and feed birds.
Born of the union of two Latin words, hortus, meaning
‘garden plant', and cultura, meaning ‘culture', horticulture in its truest
form spans across many fields and involves many different types of
careers, ranging from industry, to government, from wholesale and retail
businesses, to propagators, plant breeders, and even educational
institutions.
Horticulture enthusiasts will be interested to learn that there are
five main areas of horticulture to choose from. Landscape horticulture,
which is involved in the production and maintenance of landscape plants is
one. Floriculture primarily deals with the marketing, and production of
floral crops, whilst olericulture deals with vegetables cultivation.
Pomology, and postharvest physiology are the last two
of the five areas of horticulture. The study of pomology is based on the
cultivation, production, and marketing of fruits, whilst the study of
postharvest physiology channels its energies into the promotion of crop
quality, and reduction of overall spoilage for all crops.
Tip!
If you become obsessed with gardening as I am, and anything that
even remotely involves plants, and their well being, then you are
probably a closet horticulturist
So now that you have a general view of horticulture,
and everything associated with it, perhaps you would really like to get
yourself dug into it! If you are interested, there are always classes on
horticulture that you could go take to share hours of gardening pleasure
with like-minded souls. Perhaps you could even sign up for a night class
or two, at your local community college. You will never know unless
you try. Besides it's always better to be up front and open with your
friends and family, rather than being a closet horticulturist!