Nursery Salt Lake City UT

Nurseries in Salt Lake City, UT can help with eliminating weeds and getting the soil ready for your flowers and vegetables are important first steps in growing a successful nursery. Time spent in preparation reduces the time you'll have to spend maintaining and weeding your garden over the course of the growing season. Read on to learn more about finding a Nursery in Salt Lake City, UT to help you with your planting needs.

Gilson Sprinkler/ Snowplow
(801) 466-2988
PO Box 1062
Salt Lake City, UT
Wasatch Lawn & Landscape
(801) 262-9006
5159 S 300 W
Murray, UT
J & L Garden Ctr
(801) 292-0421
620 N 500 W
Bountiful, UT
Cedar Bay Design
(801) 566-6690
1670 E 8640 S
Sandy, UT
Split Mountain Garden Center
435-789-5512
9122 E. Highway 40
Jensen, UT
A-Abco Sprinklers & Irrgtn
(801) 467-0222
2896 E 3300 S
Salt Lake City, UT
RPM Property Maintenance LLC
(801) 277-0625
2611 Murray Holladay Rd
Salt Lake City, UT
Bland's Nursery
(801) 561-1321
8630 Redwood Rd
West Jordan, UT
Countrywood Nursery
(801) 816-9104
611 W 12300 S
Draper, UT
Cascade Landscape and Maintenance
801- 375-0144
1454 N Geneva Rd
Provo, UT
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Nursery

Eliminating weeds and getting the soil ready for your flowers and vegetables are important first steps in growing a successful garden. Time spent in preparation reduces the time you'll have to spend maintaining and weeding your garden over the course of the growing season.

Tools and Materials

  • String and wooden stakes
  • Spade
  • Glyphosate herbicide (optional)
  • Hoe or mattock
  • Steel garden rake
  • Soil testing sample kit
  • Soil amendments, as required
  • Garden fork or rototiller

Choose the spot. Vegetable gardens and most flowerbeds require at least 6 hours of full sun each day. Choose a level spot -- either natural or terraced -- that has well-drained soil, if possible (see Testing Soil Drainage). Thick grass or vigorous weed growth usually indicate soil drainage and nutrient levels that will support healthy garden plants.

Mark the boundaries. Outline the new garden plot with string and stakes, a hose, or a line of powdered limestone.

Eliminate the competition. Remove existing lawn by slicing under the sod with a spade and cutting it into manageable pieces. Add the pieces to your compost or use it to patch bare spots elsewhere. Kill weeds with glyphosate herbicide, pull them by hand, or chop them with a hoe or mattock and rake them up. If time permits, you can smother grass and weeds with old carpeting or black plastic anchored to the ground. For best results, leave the covering in place for several weeks of hot weather.

Test the soil. Send a sample of garden soil to a private or cooperative extension office soil-testing lab for nutrient and pH analysis. Call the lab or a local garden center for a collection kit and instructions on how to collect the sample. Test results will tell you which minerals and pH amendments your soil needs to grow healthy vegetables and flowers.

Add amendments. Adjust the soil pH -- its measure of acidity or alkalinity -- by adding ground limestone or sulfur as recommended by the soil test results. Improve the soil fertility, clay soil drainage, and sandy soil water-holding capacity by adding organic material, such as compost, well-rotted livestock manure, or composted fir bark. Apply a 1- to 2-inch layer of organic material over the garden.

Turn the soil. Work the amendments into the top 6 to 12 inches of soil with a rototiller or garden fork. Break up large clods and remove rocks and roots. Work the soil only when it is dry enough to crumble easily after squeezing � never when it is saturated with water.

Tips

The best time to eliminate weeds and grass is the season before you plan to plant your garden. You can do it just prior to planting, too, but may have more weeds pop up throughout the growing season.

Do-it-yourself soil test kits work best for detecting the soil pH, but give only a rough idea of the nutrient levels. Professional tests provide more thorough and accurate information and recommendations.

Photography by Suzanne DeJohn/National Gardening Association

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