Companion Planting
August 20th, 2010 - By allanmadamsCompanion plantings of some kind are already practiced all through agricultural history. Some in the earliest written documents on gardening discuss these relationships. Early settlers discovered American Primary Nations men and women had been using an interplanting scheme of corn-bean-squash that balanced the requirements of each and every crop for light, water, and nutrients. Inside the 1800’s, hemp (cannabis) was often planted around a cabbage field to help keep away the white cabbage butterflies in Holland. In quite a few parts of the world today, subsistence farmers and organic gardeners build two or additional crops simultaneously in a given location to achieve a certain benefit.

