I have seen artificial plants, rock, draught tolerant plants, and even gnomes.
No because the salt will kill the plants. Rainwater is very good for watering the garden because it contains no additives such a chlorine with is often present in tap water.
garden hose
You can buy granules in garden centre which you mix with the soil. It retains water thus allowing plants to have water and keep them hydrated
Miracle grow grows plants faster. Much faster than just water alone.
The roots are what carry the water to the leaves, though many people do spray the leaves their plants with water as well.
How big is the garden? Where is the garden located? Climate zone? How many plants and what types of plants are in the garden?
Dissolved minerals in the water. In most cases it is better to water your garden with hard water instead of treated water. The plants typically like the minerals found in hard water.
buy a water on shop,,it easy :) xD
Depends on the plants
Yes you can water your garden to much so be careful, you don't want to drown your plants.
You can buy a watering can at a garden or home supply store.
well actually you could capture one but not in a mean way. if you make a fairy garden one might come. you just make a little fairy house. maybe out of a cardboard box. decorate it with flowers the decorations depend on what kind of fairy you wan tot come. if you decorate it with flowers and nature then a garden fairy will come. if you put the house close to water and decorate with sea life a water fairy will come. you never know you could even make a little garden fairy town. that would be cool.
No because the salt will kill the plants. Rainwater is very good for watering the garden because it contains no additives such a chlorine with is often present in tap water.
To tend a garden properly one would need to mow the lawn properly every now and again, water the plants thoroughly, and make sure no unwanted plants make their way into the garden.
No.
Space, soil, sunlight, water, plants.
A garden is a system because it has inputs (water, sunlight), outputs (food, beautiful garden), and side effects (dying plants, ingesting pesticides from food grown).