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10 Blooming Flowers for your Winter Garden - Fantastic Gardeners - blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk - Britain
blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk
07.08.2023 / 11:41

10 Blooming Flowers for your Winter Garden - Fantastic Gardeners

Winter season doesn’t mean you have to turn your back to your flower garden until spring comes. There is a good number of plants that bloom beautifully even in the coldest of weather. Let’s dig into their world and see which ones you will fancy.

Diane’s Daylily Garden - finegardening.com - Canada
finegardening.com
07.08.2023 / 07:51

Diane’s Daylily Garden

My name is Diane Porter, and I live in Nova Scotia, Canada. We are a Zone 5 area here, so I like pretty hardy plants. Daylilies (Hemerocallis, Zones 4–9 for most cultivars) fit my garden perfectly. I have always enjoyed gardening and  actually worked at a local garden center for a few seasons. The gardening bug hit hard!

You Might Not Be Replacing Your Home’s Air Filters Enough, Experts Warn - bhg.com - Usa - Canada
bhg.com
05.08.2023 / 14:53

You Might Not Be Replacing Your Home’s Air Filters Enough, Experts Warn

When was the last time you replaced the air filters in your home? With poor air quality becoming a growing concern across the United States and Canada, you are probably more aware of your home’s air filters than ever before. Air filters help keep our home’s air clean and free of dust, dander, and pollutants. This not only helps us breathe easier, but it also keeps the HVAC systems in good shape and prevents them from experiencing potential damage due to the buildup of airborne particulates.

Peace Gardens as Memorials - gardenerstips.co.uk - Usa - Britain - Canada - state Utah
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:39

Peace Gardens as Memorials

There are many gardens and monuments dedicated to Peace and they are worth seeking out when you are on your travels.

Attracting Beneficial Insects to Your Vegetable Garden - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:04

Attracting Beneficial Insects to Your Vegetable Garden

There is an old saying, “The enemy of my enemy is my friend.” We can apply this saying to gardening as just about every insect pest that plagues our gardens has one or more natural enemies that prey on or parasitize it. These enemies (or friends to us) include ladybugs, praying mantids, assassin bugs, ground beetles, robber flies, parasitic wasps, syrphid flies, and many others. Though often overlooked, these beneficial species can help significantly in managing insect pests in our vegetable gardens.

Organic lawn care with paul tukey: crabgrass control, reducing compaction - awaytogarden.com - Usa - Canada - state Maryland
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 23:07

Organic lawn care with paul tukey: crabgrass control, reducing compaction

IF YOU ARE STILL USING any synthetic chemicals on your lawn, I hope you will stop. So does Paul Tukey. When he founded SafeLawns in 2006, Paul says, “It didn’t occur to people that their lawns could be dangerous.”“The sad reality is that we know that a lot of the chemicals used to grow the lawn (the fertilizers), or the chemicals used to control weeds or insects or fungal diseases—all  of these chemicals are designed to kill things, and they can make us very sick, and they make the water very sick, and the soil very sick, and the air very unhealthy.”Giving up chemicals doesn’t mean you have to pave over your front yard.“We will have lawns long after all these chemicals are banned in the United States, as they have been banned in Canada,” says Paul—explaining that more than 80 percent of Canadians cannot use weed and feed products, or glyphosate (the active ingredient in Roundup herbicide) because they are

Q&a and a giveaway: you grow girl’s gayla trail - awaytogarden.com - Canada - India - city New York - county Garden
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:46

Q&a and a giveaway: you grow girl’s gayla trail

In a series of emails and Skype calls since I began A Way to Garden in 2008, Gayla and I have found so much shared turf:We two longtime organic gardeners can get riled up—over topics ranging from the environment, to chemical companies and the “business” of gardening in general, to dyed mulch and more (her most recent rant on offcolor mulch is way down in this post). We both overdo it—on plants, work, and a major inclination to cart home lots of rusty buckets and other “vintage” metal stuff from tag sales. We both live in the garden offseason crammed into spaces where in many rooms, the plants get a majority of the square footage. (And why not?) In addition to the usual tools, you’ll find us both with a camera in the garden, though Gayla is a professional ph

Earthworm 101, with great lakes worm watch - awaytogarden.com - Canada - New York - state Minnesota - state Vermont
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:36

Earthworm 101, with great lakes worm watch

First, some background: Great Lakes Worm Watch is a citizen-science outreach organization, working to map the state of the earthworms—and the habitats they’re living in.“We want to know where earthworms are across the landscape,” says Ryan—and that means even beyond the Great Lakes area, where the project began.  (There is a Canada Worm Watch, too, for those across the border; researchers at the University of Vermont, at the Cary Institute in Millbrook, New York, and elsewhere are likewise studying earthworm invasion.)Individuals, schools or garden groups can sign on help collect data on what worms are fou

My radio show praised in ‘the guardian,’ plus your urgent garden questions answered - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:36

My radio show praised in ‘the guardian,’ plus your urgent garden questions answered

Marion (with an impressive cabbage, below), is like her older sister and our parents a writerly type. Decades ago she began leaving voicemails that always started with, “I’ve got an Urgent Garden Question,” and then revealed her latest horticultural crisis.  In the early years, I suspected she was just trying to come up with an ice-breaker, and didn’t really need advice.We’d had some rough patches, as sisters do, and I knew she had a Master Gardener certificate—so why did she need my help? But it gave us a reason to speak, and get past things that had been in the way. For that I thank her (as I did in this 1989 essay and have been doing ever since). And I thank her for helping me solve my “how to do Q&A on the air” question, too.have a question to ask?WE’LL PUT OUT A CALL for your latest questions on Facebook before each Q&A edition of the radio show, and you can also ask here on the blog anytime. Each month I’ll gather the best ones—best as in likely to be most helpful to others—and answer them on the air.a way to garden

Dreaded norway maples, good groundcovers (including sedges): shade-garden q&a with ken druse - awaytogarden.com - county Garden
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:35

Dreaded norway maples, good groundcovers (including sedges): shade-garden q&a with ken druse

This is the 12th of our monthly Urgent Garden Question Q&A shows, and we thank you for your support—and for your questions most of all. You can keep them coming any time in comments or by email, using the contact form, or at Facebook.Read along as you listen to the Jan. 1, 2018 edition of my public-radio show and podcast using the player below. You can subscribe to all future editions on iTunes or Stitcher (and browse my archive of podcasts here).Plus: Enter to win a copy of Ken’s n

Extend your clematis bloom season to spring through fall, with dan long - awaytogarden.com
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:25

Extend your clematis bloom season to spring through fall, with dan long

When I’m plant shopping, I try to discipline myself by reciting a little mantra: “early, middle, late.” As in: It’s a long season of possibilities, if you plan correctly. Early, middle, late is the reminder to fill my garden-center wagon (or my online shopping cart) with more than a single moment of a favorite plant, and enjoy a prolonged season.You might already be following that advice with lilacs or daffodils or daylilies and have not just one variety but a whole sequence, but we can—and should—be doing it with Clematis, too.My vine-mad friend Dan Long ofBrushwood Nursery, longti

Productive fall and winter vegetable gardens, with niki jabbour - awaytogarden.com - Canada
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:24

Productive fall and winter vegetable gardens, with niki jabbour

I guess that’s why she titled her 2011 book, “The Year-Round Vegetable Gardener: How to Grow Your Own Food 365 Days a Year No Matter Where You Live.”Niki’s vegetable garden in Halifax just got a facelift to become even more productive. She is one of the contributors to the blog Savvy Gardening and creator of the award-winning radio program, The Weekend Gardener, that’s heard throughout Eastern Canada. And we spoke just in time for all of us us to order the seeds and learn the tactics we’ll need to grow our own offseason gardens, too.Read along as you listen to the Aug. 8, 2

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