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Gardening Broad spectrumBroadcast seeding

broadcast seedingSowing across large areas by scattering seed mechanically or by hand.
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Broadcasting seeds
To scatter seeds such as annual_flowers, salad crops and lawn_seed evenly over the soil surface. These are then lightly raked in or covered with a shallow layer of sieved soil.

Broadcast Spreading:
Broadcast spreading has become one of the most popular ways to apply fertilizer to your lawn. It is typically done with either a hand-held broadcast spreader or the most commonly used walk-behind rotary spreader.

Broadcast - To simply scatter seed by hand over the area to be seeded, rather than sowing in rows.
Bud Union - The point where a plant has been grafted. Usually indicated by a small knoblike growth on a tree, shrub, or rosebush.

Broadcast: Scattering seed or fertilizer rather than placing it in rows.
Chlorosis: Lack of green color in leaves, caused by nutritional deficiencies, environment or disease.

broadcast seeding
Scattering seeds in a random pattern across a large area.
brown compost material ...

Broadcast application-The application of a fertilizer or herbicide to the entire surface of a bed or field, or the sowing of seed by scattering it uniformly or randomly over the soil or container surface, rather than sowing in rows.

broadcast application. The application of a material such as fertilizer or herbicide to the entire surface of a field.
brood. All the individuals of a generation that hatch at about the same time.
bud. Bud that forms in the axil of a leaf.

BROADCAST - A method by which seeds or fertilizer are scattering randomly to cover an area.
BROWN ROT - A fungus that is very common disease on fruit. Buy disease resistant varieties. Remove all infected parts of the plant.

broadcast (1) To sow seed by scattering it over the soil surface. (2) To apply a pesticide or fertilizer uniformly to an entire, specific area by scattering or spraying it.
broadleaf evergreen A non-needled evergreen.

Use a broadcast herbicide. Scotts Turf Builder is one recommendation.
Pull weeds by hand. This is the organic approach to care if you don't want to use chemicals on your lawn.

Broadcast small seeds such as carrots, lettuces, spinach, onions and beets over the soil, then lightly cover with top soil. When the seedlings are about an inch high, thin to one inch apart.

Broadcasting
Applying fertilizer or other materials over the entire area
Compacted Soil ...

Broadcast seeding
The act of scattering seeds, by the handful, across a large area. This process is typically used for seeding of lawns and wildflower gardens.
Bulb ...

BROADCASTING: Refered to as scattering seed randomly by hand.
BROWN ROT: A fungus that is very common disease on fruit. Buy disease resistant varieties. Remove all infected parts of the plant.

Broadcasting seeds in a prepared bed
1. For a patterned planting, outline the areas for each kind of seed with gypsum, flour, or stakes and string. You may want to put a label in each area.

Broadcast spreaders work differently: a rotating disk spreads fertilizer in a circular pattern in front of the hopper.

Broadcast it over the entire garden three weeks or more before planting. Or if you have only a small quantity of compost, it may be mixed into the soil along each planting furrow or at each hill site.

"Broadcasting seeds on snow could work, but I don't see any real point in it," says William Cullina, author and nursery director of the New England Wild Flower Society.

A broadcast spreader uses a rotating disk to spread fertilizer over an arc-shaped area. Broadcast fertilizer spreaders are good at covering a large area quickly. Accuracy is sacrificed for speed, however.

In broadcast sowing the operator scatters the seed over a considerable breadth of surface, previously prepared by digging, or otherwise being minutely pulverized.

For a broadcast application, Byron suggests using half the recommended amount of fertilizer and applying it in one direction. Then, add the remaining amount and apply the fertilizer in a perpendicular direction making a grid for maximum coverage.

Hand-held broadcast spreaders are smaller versions of the drop spreader, filled with seed or fertilizer. As you walk you turn a handle that dispenses what is inside.
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Drop and broadcast spreaders can be used to apply granular fertilizer to large areas, such as established lawns, for before planting large lawns, landscape beds and gardens.

How to grow Broadcast the seeds thinly in mid April through to August or when all danger of frost is over. Rake the seeds in lightly and keep well watered.

Seed can be broadcast freely into planting beds or sown in straight rows. To get the best of both worlds, use flour to mark drifts in the soil, then sow seeds in straight lines within each drift.
Tools ...

If sowing outdoors, broadcast it in your area and thin as it starts growing, keeping the best plants. As it grows, remove the leaves as soon as they are big enough so that the plant keeps producing more leaves.

Cultivation: Seeds are so small, mix with sand and broadcast. Cover lightly and keep moist. Tall plants may need staking. Garlic (Liliaceae), Also see Herb Vitamins and Herbs in the Medicine Cabinet
Hardy plants
Soil pH 4.5 - 8.3 ...

Broadcast one-half of the seed/sand mix using a handheld broadcast seeder, or by hand, using an even, sweeping motion. Then walk across the seedbed at right angles to the path you took before, sowing the other half of the seed.

Spot treatment is preferable to broadcast applications with any postemergent herbicide because of the lessened potential for harming non-target plants in the landscape.

The way to spread this fertiliser is either by hand, which is called broadcasting, or by mechanical fertiliser spreader. When using the broadcast method you take a handful of fertiliser (use gloves) and throw the fertiliser out in a broad spread.

There are two types of Fertilizer Spreaders, Drop Spreaders and Broadcast Spreaders. Drop Spreaders distribute the fertilizer from a large capacity hopper onto an auger that drops the material through calibrated, adjustable holes.

Proper application-For proper coverage a broadcast spreader should be used. This reduces the likelihood of misapplication. To assure uniform coverage with either a broadcast spreader or a drop spreader, follow these simple steps: ...

There's a reason that they don't broadcast New Year's celebrations from Milwaukee. Milwaukee is probably a very nice town, but if you want to show people partying like their lives depend on it, you do it in the city that never sleeps, New York City.

When sowing the seeds, rather than broadcasting or scattering them over each
designated area as is traditional, create short drills at the distance apart at which
the plants should eventually be spaced. Sow the seeds, covering them by about ...

Broadcast half the seed, spreading it before you horizontally back and forth, then repeat with the other half of the seed while standing perpendicular to the way you were originally. This will give you good coverage of the area.

This great photography information site has been praised by the British Broadcasting Corporation (the BBC), Australian National Radio and in numerous publications around the world. It was selected as a prestigious Hot Site by USAToday.

When sowing seed in a wide bed, broadcast sowing is the method of choice. If you transplant seedlings, plant in staggered rows.

You can broadcast fertilizer, such as you do seed over a large area like a lawn. You can do banding which is applying a circle of fertilizer around and deeper than the seed. Banding is done when transplanting and as the roots develop.

To grow either type of cosmos as a wildflower, simply mix the contents of a packet of seeds with an equal amount of sand and broadcast them, scooping up handfuls of the mixture and tossing it with a broad, sweeping gesture onto cultivated, ...

They're not the kind of grasses that you broadcast spread across the front or back yard. Hopefully, you will never run across them with the lawn mower, either. Rather, Ornamental Grasses are decorative. They look great in the flower garden.

When direct seeding, seeds can either be broadcast and planted in wide rows or spaced 8-12" apart. Spacing is best if you want it to mature into heads.
If you are going for heads, be sure to harvest before the head starts to elongate.

You can plant most cover crops in a home garden by broadcasting the seed, then raking it in, and turning on the sprinkler.

Baker, the star of gardening videos and the Public Broadcasting System, advises people to douse their yards with special "tonics" made from chewing tobacco, human urine, birth control pills, mouthwash, molasses, detergent and beer.

Broadcasting baits across the orchard floor by hand, spreader, or airplane is the most common method of application.

Taste and scent repellents are liquid concentrates that are either broadcast in small devices attached to the plants or mixed with water and sprayed on the foliage.

To prevent this acidity broadcast some gritty rock dust or powder - dolomite, limestone, basalt, granite or gypsum. Wood-ash can also be used, but is highly alkaline and can kill worms if in contact with their moist skin.

Broadcast spreading of the seed will work well. With an indoor start, annuals and some perennial varieties will bloom the first year. For indoor starts, plant in pots or trays six to eight weeks before the last frost in your area.

The seeds are sown broadcast in the patch selected, and then are lightly covered with soil. The soil may be gently tamped after the covering is completed. The patch should be identified with a stake and some sort of sign.

Rake gently to mix in the seed and cover it with soil, only 1/4- to 1/2-inch deep. Broadcast the reserved soil mixture over any spots where the seed is exposed.
9. Roll the area.
This ensures that seeds have firm contact with the soil.

Imagining a field of flowers there, she first planted a backdrop of native shrubs and broadcast a blend of meadow seeds in front of it.

Mix together well and let dry; spread with a broadcast spreader or roll into tiny balls while still moist and place near problem areas.

Fertilize vegetable gardens and annual flowerbeds when the soil is being tilled and prepared for planting. Broadcast the desired amount of fertilizer evenly over the garden space and till it into the top 6-8 inches of soil.

Dr. Trey Rogers, Briggs and Stratton Yard Doctor, gives us some great tips for applying fertilizer. If possible, use a broadcast spreader instead of a drop spreader. This minimizes the chances of leaving lines in the lawns.
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Sow seeds as soon as soil can be worked in spring; germination takes two to three weeks. Plant six millimetres deep, 2.5 centimetres apart in rows 30 centimetres apart or broadcast seed in a bed.

Green manures can either be sown in rows or broadcast and raked in gently. Dig in the green manure with a sharp spade in spring. Protect overwintering crops from slugs especially during mild, damp spells.

See also: Plant, Soil, Water, Growing, Planting