If you have a gardener in your family—or maybe you need to drop some hints for yourself—here are a few new books that will make every gardener happy.
Only the vegetalbe entries with the highest nationwide average score are considered worthy of a national AAS Award.
Resolutions that involve or help other people are more likely to be kept than ones focusing on yourself. Here a few you can try in 2025!
People like to give plants as gifts for birthdays, when a baby is born, or for funerals. Here are a few to add to your list.
We are down to the last week of shopping for Christmas presents. I have a few last-minute gift ideas that you can still get by shopping locally!
Sticking with last week’s theme of books that are good for gardeners, here are a few more.
Even if you are a young gardener now, you are getting older every day, and the time will come when old age sneaks up on you.
I was told that I could use lawn fertilizer to melt the ice, and it would then fertilize the grass when the weather warms up. What do you think?
I have tried growing amaryllis bulbs, and they seem to grow smaller each year. What am I doing wrong?
“I have three potted mums on my porch. The flowers are fading, and I am wondering what to do with them next. They were expensive, and I would like to keep them until next year. I have a place in the back of my vegetable garden where I could bury the pots until next spring. What do I do with them in the spring?”
Help! I planted my tomato plants late, and then we had a lot of hot, dry weather, so there were no tomatoes. Now there are dozens of green tomatoes, but our average first fall frost is coming soon!
“My lawn is getting lumpy, for lack of a better word. What would be a good way to smooth it out?”
“For the past month, we have had several hummingbirds using our feeder. It hangs in front of my office window, and I notice them all day long. Yesterday, there was only one. I assume they are leaving for migration. How long should I leave the feeder up? I don’t want to have them not migrate because the feeder is up.”
Plants use water 24 hours a day, but we don’t have to water them 24 hours a day, because the soil acts like a sponge and releases water to them.
Many tropical houseplants are large trees or shrubs in their original habitat, and they can grow rapidly in one summer outdoors. But what about autumn?






