Garden Terminology
acidic: A soil, compost, or liquid with a pH of less than 7.0
acre: Surface area consisting of 43,560 square feet. 640 acres equals 1 square mile.
aerating soil / aeration: Loosening the soil to allow better air circulation, accomplished by mechanical methods.
aerobic: Describes organisms living or occurring only when oxygen is present.
alkaline: A soil, liquid or compost with a pH over 7.0
amendment: Any material, such as compost, lime, or manure that is worked into the soil to improve its condition (i.e. water retention, permeability, water infiltration, drainage, aeration and structure)
anaerobic: Describes organisms living or occurring where there is no oxygen.
annual: A plant that blooms, produces seed, and dies in one year.
beneficial insect: An insect that benefits your garden by eating or laying its eggs in other insects, thereby controlling their population.
biennial: A plant that completes its full life-cycle in two growing seasons, producing leaves in the first and flowers in the second.
biodegradable: Able to decompose or break down through natural bacterial or fungal action. Substances made of organic matter are biodegradable.
biological pest control: Using living organisms such as beneficial insects or parasites to destroy garden pests.
bolt: A term used to describe a plant that has gone to seed prematurely.
bone meal: Finely ground fertilizer composed of white or light gray bone that adds phosphorus to the soil.
calcitic Limestone: A common material used for "liming" soil that has an acid level that is too high. This type is most commonly used and contains calcium carbonate.
chelation: The formation of bonds between organic compounds and metals, some of which are insoluble, as in humus. Soluble chelates are used in fertilizers to help keep nutrient metals, such as iron, mobile in the soil and thus available to plants rather than locked up in insoluble mineral salts.
chlorosis: A yellowing or blanching of the leaves due to lack of chlorophyll, nutrient deficiencies or disease.
cold frame: An unheated structure usually made of wood and covered with glass or plastic. Cold frames are used to protect plants from frost and are helpful season extenders.
companion planting: The sowing of seeds in the garden in such a way that plants help each other grow instead of competing against each other.
compost: Completely decayed organic matter used for conditioning soil. It is dark, odorless and rich in nutrients.
cover crop: Vegetation grown to protect and build the soil during an interval when the area would otherwise lie fallow.
crop rotation: The planting of a specific crop in a site different from the previous year.
cutting: A vegetative method of plant propagation whereby a piece of plant leaf, stem, root or bud is cut from a parent plant. It is then inserted into a growing medium to form roots, thus developing a new plant.
damping off: Decay of young seedlings at ground level following fungal attack. Often the result of soil borne diseases and over watering.
dead heading: The act of removing spent flowers or flowerheads for aesthetics, to prolong bloom for up to several weeks or promote re-bloom, or to prevent seeding.
deep shade: A plant requiring less than 2 hours of dappled sun a day.
desiccate: Cause to dry up. Insecticidal soap desiccates its victims.
direct seed: To seed directly into the soil instead of starting your seeds indoors.
double digging: A method of preparing the soil by digging a trench then putting the soil from one row into the next row.
fertilizer: An organic or synthetic material added to the soil or the plant, that is important for its nutrient value.
foliar fertilizing: A technique of feeding plants by applying liquid fertilizer directly to plant leaves.
frost date: This is the average expected last frost date for your area. Frost dates are important to know for your gardening zone or planting area.
fungicides: Compounds used to prevent the spread of fungi in gardens and crops, which can cause serious damage to plants.
germinate: The beginning of growth in seeds, the action of sprouting, budding or shooting, above the soil. This occurs whenever a plant or seed begins to vegetate into leafy young plants. The breaking of dormancy in seeds or the sprouting of pollen grains deposited on a stigma.
green manure: A crop that is grown and then incorporated into the soil to increase soil fertility or organic matter content. Usually turned over into the soil a few weeks before new planting begins.
hardening Off: The process of acclimatizing plants grown under protection, in the greenhouse for example, to cooler conditions outdoors.
heavy soil: A soil that contains a high proportion of clay and is poorly drained.
humus: A fairly stable, complex group of nutrient-storing molecules created by microbes and other forces of decomposition by the conversion of organic matter. Typically its dark loamy earth.
Integrated Pest Management (IPM): A pest control strategy that uses an array of complementary methods: natural predators and parasites, pest-resistant varieties, cultural practices, biological controls, various physical techniques, and pesticides as a last resort. It is an ecological approach that can significantly reduce or eliminate the use of pesticides.
micro-nutrients: Some mineral elements are needed by plants in very small quantities. If the plants you are growing require specific "trace elements" and they are not getting them through the soil, they must be added.
mulch: Any organic material, such as wood chips, grass clippings, compost, straw, or leaves that is spread over the soil surface (around plants) to hold in moisture and help control weeds.
No-Till-Gardening: This type of gardening calls for no cultivation (or tilling) of the soil after the initial tilling. In its place, regular mulches are added and plants are planted through the mulch. This saves on labor and eliminates weeds, which might germinate as a result of tilling.
N-P-K: An abbreviation for the three main nutrients that have been identified as absolutely necessary for plants are nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K). These three are also known as "macro nutrients," and are the source of the three numbers commonly found on fertilizer labels.
organic: Refers to something derived from living organisms and is made up of carbon-based compounds. It is also a general term used for a type of gardening using no chemical or synthetic fertilizers or pesticides.
organic gardening: Method of gardening based on building a healthy, living soil through composting and using supplemental nutrients from naturally occurring deposits. The basic principle is to feed the soil so the soil will feed the plants.
perennial: A plant that grows and flowers for years. They are either evergreens or may die back to the ground but will grow again the following season.
pH: A scale from 0-14 that explains the degree of acidity or alkalinity of the water or soil. Soil pH is very important because it affects the availability of nutrients to plants and the activity of microorganisms in the soil.
rhizome: A fleshy underground stem or runner. Creeping grasses spread by rhizomes.
season extender: Any technique or piece of equipment used to extend the growing season in both spring and fall. Examples include; row covers, greenhouses, hotbeds, cold frames, and products such as Wall O' Waters.
soil test: A measurement of the major nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium) and pH levels in the soil.
tilth: Describes the general health of the soil including a balance of nutrients, water, and air. Soil that is healthy and has good physical qualities is in good tilth.
topdressing: Applying fertilizers or some kind of soil amendment after seeding, transplanting or once the crop has been established.
transplanting: The moving of a plant from one growth medium to another.
vermiculture: The use of red worms to convert food scraps or other organic materials into worm castings.
worm casting: The digested organic waste of red worms. Gardeners consider them the most nutrient dense organic compost available.
acre: Surface area consisting of 43,560 square feet. 640 acres equals 1 square mile.
aerating soil / aeration: Loosening the soil to allow better air circulation, accomplished by mechanical methods.
aerobic: Describes organisms living or occurring only when oxygen is present.
alkaline: A soil, liquid or compost with a pH over 7.0
amendment: Any material, such as compost, lime, or manure that is worked into the soil to improve its condition (i.e. water retention, permeability, water infiltration, drainage, aeration and structure)
anaerobic: Describes organisms living or occurring where there is no oxygen.
annual: A plant that blooms, produces seed, and dies in one year.
beneficial insect: An insect that benefits your garden by eating or laying its eggs in other insects, thereby controlling their population.
biennial: A plant that completes its full life-cycle in two growing seasons, producing leaves in the first and flowers in the second.
biodegradable: Able to decompose or break down through natural bacterial or fungal action. Substances made of organic matter are biodegradable.
biological pest control: Using living organisms such as beneficial insects or parasites to destroy garden pests.
bolt: A term used to describe a plant that has gone to seed prematurely.
bone meal: Finely ground fertilizer composed of white or light gray bone that adds phosphorus to the soil.
calcitic Limestone: A common material used for "liming" soil that has an acid level that is too high. This type is most commonly used and contains calcium carbonate.
chelation: The formation of bonds between organic compounds and metals, some of which are insoluble, as in humus. Soluble chelates are used in fertilizers to help keep nutrient metals, such as iron, mobile in the soil and thus available to plants rather than locked up in insoluble mineral salts.
chlorosis: A yellowing or blanching of the leaves due to lack of chlorophyll, nutrient deficiencies or disease.
cold frame: An unheated structure usually made of wood and covered with glass or plastic. Cold frames are used to protect plants from frost and are helpful season extenders.
companion planting: The sowing of seeds in the garden in such a way that plants help each other grow instead of competing against each other.
compost: Completely decayed organic matter used for conditioning soil. It is dark, odorless and rich in nutrients.
cover crop: Vegetation grown to protect and build the soil during an interval when the area would otherwise lie fallow.
crop rotation: The planting of a specific crop in a site different from the previous year.
cutting: A vegetative method of plant propagation whereby a piece of plant leaf, stem, root or bud is cut from a parent plant. It is then inserted into a growing medium to form roots, thus developing a new plant.
damping off: Decay of young seedlings at ground level following fungal attack. Often the result of soil borne diseases and over watering.
dead heading: The act of removing spent flowers or flowerheads for aesthetics, to prolong bloom for up to several weeks or promote re-bloom, or to prevent seeding.
deep shade: A plant requiring less than 2 hours of dappled sun a day.
desiccate: Cause to dry up. Insecticidal soap desiccates its victims.
direct seed: To seed directly into the soil instead of starting your seeds indoors.
double digging: A method of preparing the soil by digging a trench then putting the soil from one row into the next row.
fertilizer: An organic or synthetic material added to the soil or the plant, that is important for its nutrient value.
foliar fertilizing: A technique of feeding plants by applying liquid fertilizer directly to plant leaves.
frost date: This is the average expected last frost date for your area. Frost dates are important to know for your gardening zone or planting area.
fungicides: Compounds used to prevent the spread of fungi in gardens and crops, which can cause serious damage to plants.
germinate: The beginning of growth in seeds, the action of sprouting, budding or shooting, above the soil. This occurs whenever a plant or seed begins to vegetate into leafy young plants. The breaking of dormancy in seeds or the sprouting of pollen grains deposited on a stigma.
green manure: A crop that is grown and then incorporated into the soil to increase soil fertility or organic matter content. Usually turned over into the soil a few weeks before new planting begins.
hardening Off: The process of acclimatizing plants grown under protection, in the greenhouse for example, to cooler conditions outdoors.
heavy soil: A soil that contains a high proportion of clay and is poorly drained.
humus: A fairly stable, complex group of nutrient-storing molecules created by microbes and other forces of decomposition by the conversion of organic matter. Typically its dark loamy earth.
Integrated Pest Management (IPM): A pest control strategy that uses an array of complementary methods: natural predators and parasites, pest-resistant varieties, cultural practices, biological controls, various physical techniques, and pesticides as a last resort. It is an ecological approach that can significantly reduce or eliminate the use of pesticides.
micro-nutrients: Some mineral elements are needed by plants in very small quantities. If the plants you are growing require specific "trace elements" and they are not getting them through the soil, they must be added.
mulch: Any organic material, such as wood chips, grass clippings, compost, straw, or leaves that is spread over the soil surface (around plants) to hold in moisture and help control weeds.
No-Till-Gardening: This type of gardening calls for no cultivation (or tilling) of the soil after the initial tilling. In its place, regular mulches are added and plants are planted through the mulch. This saves on labor and eliminates weeds, which might germinate as a result of tilling.
N-P-K: An abbreviation for the three main nutrients that have been identified as absolutely necessary for plants are nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K). These three are also known as "macro nutrients," and are the source of the three numbers commonly found on fertilizer labels.
organic: Refers to something derived from living organisms and is made up of carbon-based compounds. It is also a general term used for a type of gardening using no chemical or synthetic fertilizers or pesticides.
organic gardening: Method of gardening based on building a healthy, living soil through composting and using supplemental nutrients from naturally occurring deposits. The basic principle is to feed the soil so the soil will feed the plants.
perennial: A plant that grows and flowers for years. They are either evergreens or may die back to the ground but will grow again the following season.
pH: A scale from 0-14 that explains the degree of acidity or alkalinity of the water or soil. Soil pH is very important because it affects the availability of nutrients to plants and the activity of microorganisms in the soil.
rhizome: A fleshy underground stem or runner. Creeping grasses spread by rhizomes.
season extender: Any technique or piece of equipment used to extend the growing season in both spring and fall. Examples include; row covers, greenhouses, hotbeds, cold frames, and products such as Wall O' Waters.
soil test: A measurement of the major nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium) and pH levels in the soil.
tilth: Describes the general health of the soil including a balance of nutrients, water, and air. Soil that is healthy and has good physical qualities is in good tilth.
topdressing: Applying fertilizers or some kind of soil amendment after seeding, transplanting or once the crop has been established.
transplanting: The moving of a plant from one growth medium to another.
vermiculture: The use of red worms to convert food scraps or other organic materials into worm castings.
worm casting: The digested organic waste of red worms. Gardeners consider them the most nutrient dense organic compost available.