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Tuesday, July 19, 2016

3 Strong Reasons Why Your Garden Will Require Professional Horticultural Services

Every confident gardener makes use of all the available sources of knowledge to transform their property into a splendid green sanctuary. It brings great satisfaction to see a beautiful garden being formed thanks to your own efforts and skills. However, when it doesn't go as planned, it could be the time to ask for professional help.
When exactly does a garden need horticultural services? Below are 3 situations that will require these:

1. Poor plant development or density

You planted enough but the results are not as expected. There isn't much of a plant density and the flowers or shrubs just don't seem to grow too much. It could be the climate, the soil, the exposure to sunlight or the lack of it. Or, it could be that you are using too many chemicals on your garden, from synthetic fertilisers to pesticides. While you may be thinking you're doing it a favour, you're actually suffocating the plants with toxins.

2. Breeding new plant varieties

You might have taken up breeding, hoping to create a new, stable variety of a species. However, your efforts don't seem to pay off. To succeed, you must experiment with various conditions. This is best done in a nursery or a similar environment. The new variety will be recognized as such only when it becomes uniform (each individual plant will look similar, exhibiting the same features) and stable. To achieve this, you should work with a professional breeder. It will also help you have your plant patented at some point in future. What a horticulturist does in this sense represents an increasingly complex work, due to all the factors that are taken into account, the various combinations possible and the great care to produce the desired result. The plants will require frequent inspecting too, until the growth is stable and the needed traits show.

3. When new species is found

Plant discoverers, just like breeders 'inventing' a different type, are proud to have a new specimen in their gardens. A newly discovered or created plant, however, will require special care and not all the aspects may be obvious to the owner. To help it accommodate and thrive, one should opt for the plant protection services offered by specialists – especially in the case of a newly found variety. These also involve protecting its name and grant the rights of its owner. Plant protection goes hand in hand with licensing or patenting services.

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