While Memorial Day is over, you can still save up to 70 percent off on the outdoor essentials you need this summer. We've updated this story to reflect the current sales on Amazon that you can still shop, but move quick! Many deals won't last for much longer.
Amazon’s Memorial Day sale is already live, and the retailer is slashing prices on thousands of items across its site.
This year, you can score massive discounts on everything from bedding to home decor to household cleaning supplies to outdoor furniture. Now that summer is approaching, consider this your sign to upgrade your home essentials while staying on budget. Check out the retailer's Memorial Day savings with deals up to 70 percent off.
While Amazon has tens of thousands of deals all over its site, we’re only interested in providing you with the best recommendations. We’ve chosen the 50 best Memorial Day deals to shop on Amazon by scouring through our library of recommended products that have been vetted by thorough research and/or product testing. This week, you can save on our favorite robotic pool cleaners, cordless stick vacuums, modular outdoor sectionals, cooling weighted blankets, and more. Top brands include Shark, Best Choice Products, Tempur-Pedic, Greenworks, and more.
Amazon
To buy: $40 (orig. $48), amazon.com
One of the most sought after items throughout the late spring and early summer is a set of outdoor string lights. It’s time to decorate your patio, so check out this best-selling set of solar-powered outdoor string lights for 25 percent off. The waterproof, weather-resistant lights stand up to tough weather while brightening your space for up to six hours at a time. And they require no installation time, just wrap them around your deck’s
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Bringing the outdoors inside has been a major trend in recent years, and perhaps nothing reflects this more than the botanical wallpaper trend. Several large wallpaper brands, including Chasing Paper and Graham & Brown, along with emerging ones including Katie Kime, have introduced gorgeous botanical prints and murals (and even some woodsy wallpapers, the more rugged sub-trend of botanical wallpapers) into their collections.
When we talk about native plants, we’re often referring to landscaping, but what about growing your own edible native plant garden? Native plants have adapted to where you live, after all, and unlike, say, your usual tomatoes and strawberries, native edibles have new flavors and scents to try. Meanwhile, planting edible native plants helps to forge a connection between the way we live now, and the way communities in the West have existed for thousands of years. “Just growing these plants is a way to tap into the continuum of time,” says Evan Meyer, the executive director of the Theodore Payne Foundation. “By growing edible plants, your garden can become a much more meaningful place.”
Fantasy Venice looks like someone painted a wandering jew plant in the best of its colors. It is easy to maintain and offers spectacular shades of different hues! Let’s have a detailed look at Tradescantia Nanouk Care.
Among the various types of bees, Leafcutter Bees have garnered attention due to their unique behavior and distinctive nesting habits. So, Do Leafcutter Bees Sting? Are they good or bad? Time to find out!
It's no surprise that our editors at The Spruce are definitely plant people—and many of us are longtime plant parents, too. We love the joy of bringing home a new plant after visiting somewhere special, placing it in the cutest planter, and setting it up in a corner of our home to live permanently. We've been through the trials and tribulations of underwatering, overwatering, moisture issues, and terrible pest pressure (looking at you, fungus gnats), which is why we're bringing you a non-definitive list of some of our favorite—and least favorite—houseplants.
We’ve probably all heard the horror stories about severe skin burns from Giant Hogweed exposure (all Putin’s fault according to the Daily Express), but not many people realise that there are many other plants in the Apiaceae family capable of causing the same damage. At my allotment site earlier this year a fellow plot holder was quite badly burned after strimming her overgrown plot. I believe her arms and legs were exposed and as a consequence, when she cut through the weeds, she was covered in tiny bits of toxic sap which burned her skin. This was not caused by giant hogweed (as she first hypothesised) but by common hogweed which grows in abundance all over our allotments in Dorking. It grows quite large, sometimes up to eight feet tall with big thick stems, but not as tall as its giant cousin Heracleum mantegazzianum.
The peony, Paeonia spp., is a flowering perennial for USDA Hardiness Zones 3-8 that thrives in full sun. It blooms in springtime, and sometimes early summer.The blossoms are big and flouncy, and are a
Hyacinths are a perennial, bulbous spring flower from the genus Hyacinthus in the Asparagaceae or asparagus family.Sweetly fragrant with a delicate, fresh scent, ea
Living in a windy area is not uncommon in Britain and most people are used to it. There are things, however, that need to be considered, when living in a place where strong winds are of frequent occurrence. One of these matters is choosing fence panels, which withstand blustery winds.
The Forsythia genus is a group of plants in the Oleaceae, or olive family. It includes 11 species of deciduous woody shrubs that bear bold yellow flowers in early spring.Suited to gardeners in USDA Hardiness