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A Way To Garden

A Way To Garden

'horticultural how-to and woo-woo' | margaret roach, head gardener

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March 23, 2008
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what is killing bats?

I WAS ON THE PHONE with a fellow gardener last week near dusk when the first bat I’d seen this spring flew right past the..
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a
March 21, 2008
7 Comments

a season for sisterhood (from 1989)

WE HAVE FOUND neutral ground, my sister and I. After three and a half decades, there is at last a place for us to be..
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h
March 21, 2008
3 Comments

hot p(l)ants: hellebores, bravest perennial

WHY WAIT FOR THE FIRST of the bulbs or an extra-eager perennials like Pulmonaria to see some color outside? Most understanding of the gardener’s desperation..
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w
March 21, 2008
2 Comments

well said: clematis

AN UNPRUNED CLEMATIS looks like a disemboweled mattress—a painful sight.’—the late Christopher Lloyd of Great Dixter, garden writer, nurseryman, gardening genius. Categoriestrees & shrubs vinesTagsclematispruningvines
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w
March 21, 2008
2 Comments

well said: never say die

I CONSIDER EVERY PLANT HARDY until I have killed it myself…at least three times’ – Tony Avent, plant hunter and proprietor, Plant Delights Nursery. Categoriesetcetera
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g
March 21, 2008
5 Comments

germination testing of seeds

GERMINATION TESTING of leftover seeds would make a good science project for grade-school kids, and it can delight and inform big people, too. If you..
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s
March 21, 2008
1 Comment

smaller is better (in cabbages)

PREDICTION:  More people would actually grow, and eat, cabbage if it weren’t for those bowling-ball-sized heads of up to 8 pounds that we all think..
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w
March 21, 2008
11 Comments

why plant peas you have to stake?

IT WOULDN’T BE a vegetable garden without edible-pod peas, the closest thing to dessert that you can eat right in the garden. But why bother..
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h
March 21, 2008
12 Comments

hotp(l)ants: the brightest spring poppy

IT’S ALWAYS NICE to feel ahead of the curve. For probably fifteen years, I have been growing a springtime ephemeral (simply meaning it disappears back..
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a
March 18, 2008
13 Comments

a new cycle, a new season

‘I LAY NO CLAIM either to literal ability, or to botanical knowledge, or even to the best practical methods of cultivation,” a woman of great..
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My picks of garden gear, books, and mulch, mulch more, all things I use myself. (Disclosure: includes affiliate links.)

When to Start Your Seeds

RECENT FAVORITES

  • dahlias galore, with ceramic artist frances palmer
  • growing primula from seed, with ken druse
  • favorite asparagus recipes, with alexandra stafford (plus how to grow it)
  • my latest assignment: a series in ‘the new york times’
  • for the love of pineapple lilies: eucomis, with jenks farmer
  • growing potatoes organically: when and how to plant, hill and harvest
  • hailstone rhubarb crumble, compote, syrup
  • my weekly radio show & podcast
  • the ‘wildscape’ around us, with nancy lawson (‘the humane gardener’)
  • soil preparation: 7 ways to make a garden bed

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May 23

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A very choice selection of Astilboides tabularis I am naming var. frozeniensis. It took me decades of growing #astilboidestabularis and a 31-degree mid-May night to achieve this. Good job, Margaret. #awaytogarden #shadegarden #hellonwheels

A very choice selection of Astilboides tabularis I am naming var. frozeniensis. It took me decades of growing #astilboidestabularis and a 31-degree mid-May night to achieve this. Good job, Margaret. #awaytogarden #shadegarden #hellonwheels ...

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Apr 28

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A really cut guy at the gym said anabolic steroids really make you bulk up fast so I gave them to the asparagus. #truestory #ohsure #awaytogarden

A really cut guy at the gym said anabolic steroids really make you bulk up fast so I gave them to the asparagus. #truestory #ohsure #awaytogarden ...

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Apr 13

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No not a hungry caterpillar…a catkin of giant pussy willow dropped onto a dwarf conifer below. Had me fooled for half a second. #awaytogarden #salixchaenomeloides

No not a hungry caterpillar…a catkin of giant pussy willow dropped onto a dwarf conifer below. Had me fooled for half a second. #awaytogarden #salixchaenomeloides ...

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Mar 27

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The gold medal for bravery is awarded to #eranthishyemalis the winter aconite. They started blooming February 15, and then a couple of small snows fell and then a whopper more than knee-deep last week, but do they care? Not a bit. #awaytogarden #winteraconite

The gold medal for bravery is awarded to #eranthishyemalis the winter aconite. They started blooming February 15, and then a couple of small snows fell and then a whopper more than knee-deep last week, but do they care? Not a bit. #awaytogarden #winteraconite ...

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Mar 15

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“Frosty the Snowman, table for four.” #snowday #noreaster #awaytogarden

“Frosty the Snowman, table for four.” #snowday #noreaster #awaytogarden ...

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Nov 25

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Sep 2

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How to grow epiphytic Corydalis lutea 101: Plant an apple tree. Wait 150 years (second photo). Plant Corydalis below it. Wait till it defies gravity and sows itself 8 feet up the trunk. Voila!#awaytogarden #corydalis #corydalislutea

How to grow epiphytic Corydalis lutea 101: Plant an apple tree. Wait 150 years (second photo). Plant Corydalis below it. Wait till it defies gravity and sows itself 8 feet up the trunk. Voila!#awaytogarden #corydalis #corydalislutea ...

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Jul 30

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Get a room. #silverspottedskipper #awaytogarden #lepidoptera

Get a room. #silverspottedskipper #awaytogarden #lepidoptera ...

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FROM THE WEEKLY PODCAST

rethinking the lawn, with dan wilder

THE LECTURE that he’s been giving for a number of years is not-so-subtly called “Kill Your Lawn.” Ecological horticulturist Dan Jaffe Wilder knows that starting over and creating an entire native habitat instead of a lawn isn’t for everyone. But Dan just wants to grab our attention and get us to start to make some changes at least in the way we care for the turfgrass we do want in our landscapes. And maybe give up a little square footage of it to some other kind of more diverse planting, too, like the wild strawberries (Fragaria virginiana, inset). Alternative, more eco-focused styles of lawn care, along with some lawn alternatives is what he and I talked about on the podcast. Dan is Director of Applied Ecology at Norcross Wildlife Foundation in Wales, Massachusetts, and its 8,000-acre sanctuary. He’s also co-author with Mark Richardson of the book “Native Plants for New England Gardens.”

(Stream it below,  read the illustrated transcript or subscribe free.)

https://robinhoodradioondemand.com/podcast-player/29859/rethinking-lawn-with-dan-wilder-a-way-to-garden-with-margaret-roach-june-27-2022.mp3

Welcome! I’m Margaret Roach, a leading garden writer for 30 years—at ‘Martha Stewart Living,’ ‘Newsday,’ and in three books. Since April 2020, I have been the garden columnist for “The New York Times,” where I began my journalism career decades ago. I host a public-radio podcast; I also lecture, plus hold tours at my 2.3-acre Hudson Valley (NY) Zone 5B garden in “normal” years, and always say no to chemicals and yes to great plants.

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