Gardening
Gardening is a useful and relaxing pastime. Read gardening tips and learn how to plan and care for a variety of gardens.
12 Sunflowers Facts for Beginner Gardeners
How can you recycle water for your outdoor garden?
5 Ways to Garden in Winter
Square Foot Gardening: The Planting Method Created By an Engineer
Hugelkultur Bed: Creating the Perfect Soil for Your Garden
How Deadheading Helps Flowering Plants Flourish
How to Store Canna Bulbs
Flowering Onion
Glory-of-the-Snow
Community Gardens Are Good for the Neighborhood
Use Your Pee to Grow Your Peas
Companion Planting: The Do's and Don'ts of Growing Plants Together
How a Closed Terrarium Can Live for Decades, No Water Added
What's In Potting Soil? Everything But Soil
What Does the Money Tree Have to Do With Lunar New Year?
Put Down the Pesticides! Introduce Beneficial Insects Into Your Garden
Ranunculus Is a Toxic Beauty With a Doozy of a Name
Tiger Lilies Are Easy-to-grow Garden Showstoppers
5 Easy Medicinal Herbs You Should Know and Grow
How Do You Grow a 2,000-pound Pumpkin?
How Bog Gardens Work
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Square Foot Gardening is great for people who want to grow their own veggies and who also like very specific instructions.
Beneficial insects can help keep your garden healthy and beautiful and are far more environmentally friendly than pesticides.
If you're looking for an easy, organic way to improve your soil and create a permanent, thriving garden bed, a hugelkultur bed will check all the boxes for you.
By Kate Morgan
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In a world so heavily dependent on pharmaceuticals, it's a wonderful thing to be able to treat some common maladies straight out of your garden.
By Kate Morgan
A study published in the journal Ecology Letters highlights the benefits of urban gardens for their human caretakers and local ecosystems.
By Rebecca Owen
Most of us just pee and flush without giving it a second thought, but your urine, when used correctly, can be a great fertilizer for your garden.
By Kate Morgan
Learn which plants benefit each other — and which plants shouldn't be neighbors — to get the most out of your garden.
By Kate Morgan
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Did you know you don't need a plot of dirt or a ton of space to grow a lush vegetable and flower garden? You can get started with a bale of straw.
By Kate Morgan
"Lasagna gardening" is a no-till, no-dig method of organic gardening that helps create rich, healthy soil and requires very little work to get started.
By Kate Morgan
Farmers grow giant pumpkins heavier than cars using one seed variety. And one grower just set a new world record, squashing the competition.
By Muriel Vega
Removing the spent blooms from your flowering plants will keep your garden looking its best and help your plants stay focused on reblooming.
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David Latimer put a plant and some compost in a bottle in 1960. It's still alive and thriving over 60 years later. How does a closed ecosystem like this work?
Ranunculus is a genus containing more than 600 species, all of which are beautiful, but toxic to both humans and animals.
By Carrie Tatro
Tiger lilies have it all – they're edible, have healing properties and act as perfect pollinator magnets. They're also long-lasting, strikingly beautiful and super easy to grow.
By Carrie Tatro
Bee balm is one of those staple plants that gardeners love for its beauty, its many varieties and its value as a magnet for pollinators.
By Carrie Tatro
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Potting soil looks an awful lot like dirt, except there's likely no earth in the mix. So, what is it really made of? And is it better for potted plants than the stuff from the ground?
By Alia Hoyt
A cinch to plant and tend, forsythia is beloved for its vivid yellow blooms. They also mark the beginning. Here's how to grow and care for these beauties.
By Alia Hoyt
Providing a great backdrop for any sunny garden, the butterfly bush comes in many colors and attracts butterflies, hummingbirds and bees galore.
By Wendy Bowman
The money tree has long been a symbol of good fortune in Asia. But how did the plant get its name?
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Those white beads you see in potting soil are made of a volcanic glass called perlite. And that's not the only place you'll see this versatile material. So how is it made and what is it used for?
You know that an apple a day keeps the doctor away, but what's your IQ on the lesser-known fruits (and veggies) of the world? Take our quiz to find out!
By Alia Hoyt
One of the oldest and most widely used materials in the world, baked clay or terracotta, can be found on roofs, in museums and in gardens all over the world.
If you don't already have a trellis working for you in your garden, you probably need one.
By Alia Hoyt
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Despite being pretty in pink, oleander is a highly poisonous plant. And now it's being touted as a cure for COVID-19. We'll break down the facts from fiction.
This pretty flower has been known for centuries to have chemicals that can regulate your heartbeat but also poison you.
By Alia Hoyt