There is valid concern regarding cancer-causing
chemical pesticides used around the home and in the backyard vegetable garden. For the garden, many pests are drawn
to unhealthy soils and plants, and as a result, the need for pesticide application increases to control damage done by
garden invaders. However, if you keep your garden healthy, and implement the practice of companion planting, you might
be able to reduce your use of toxic chemical pesticides to zero. Companion planting is the practice of growing plants
close to each other that utilizes each plant's ability to protect the other plant by attracting beneficial insects and
repelling harmful ones. Gardening organic is a satisfying cancer prevention way to get fresh vegetables to your dinner
table. For example, the Three Sisters gardening practice of North America Native Americans is organic and practical. Corn, squash, and climbing beans are grown close together. The corn provides a natural pole for the beans to climb, the beans provide needed nutrients for the soil and the squash acts as a spreading ground cover choking out weeds and protecting the soil from drying out too fast. A fish is planted in the soil to provide a natural fertilizer.
Yayasan IDEP Foundation offers a comprehensive companion planting chart, including an extensive list of tips on natural insect repellants for ants, aphids, cabbage butterfly, mosquitoes, moths, red spider, fleas, flies, slugs, snails and more -- to use around the home and to grow in your garden and yard. Available as a free PDF document, you can download the Companion Planting Chart here.










