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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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June 13, 2020
493 Comments

‘spirit of place:’ designing and defining a garden that belongs, with bill noble

GARDEN DESIGNER Bill Noble starts his new book with this promise: “I’m going to tell you a story of the pleasures and challenges, both aesthetic..
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June 6, 2020
431 Comments

a closer look at summer wildflowers, with carol gracie

THE BELOVED WILDFLOWERS of springtime—the trilliums, mayapples, Virginia bluebells—are probably gone till next year, but don’t despair. Here comes the next cast of players, the..
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May 29, 2020
52 Comments

remembering plants we’ve loved (and lost), with ken druse

I WAS CRAWLING around weeding the other day and there it was: yet another turquoise-colored plastic label I knew was from the original Heronswood Nursery..
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May 22, 2020
407 Comments

‘what it’s like to be a bird:’ a conversation with david sibley

IF YOU’RE A BIRD PERSON, as I am, you may feel as if you know this week’s podcast guest, because one of his field guides,..
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May 20, 2020
83 Comments

‘instant’ water garden: try seasonal troughs

NOTHING ADDS MORE TO A GARDEN THAN WATER. Just ask the birds, frogs, and insects—oh, and human visitors, too.  It’s a magical element, providing sustenance..
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May 15, 2020
446 Comments

tomato success, from transplant to harvest, with craig lehoullier

EVERY GARDENER has his or her own tomato secrets, tips, and tricks they’re sure will bring earliest fruit or the biggest harvest. Some of us..
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May 9, 2020
38 Comments

really? a may 9 snow on top of everything else this spring?

WE OLDER HUMAN TYPES sometimes kid that we are 29 (as in years old), but I’ll tell you what: 29 (as in F degrees) looks..
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May 8, 2020
497 Comments

it’s time to learn some botanical latin (and why), with ross bayton

I’M GRATEFUL that when I began gardening, I fell in with a bunch of plant nerds who spoke not in common names but in botanical..
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May 2, 2020
22 Comments

cutbacks and more: keep the garden looking great when spring fades, with ken druse

A FAMOUS GARDENER Ken Druse and I know often says this one-liner: “Anyone can do spring.” What he means is: and then what happens after..
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April 25, 2020
19 Comments

miraculous bird nests (vs. wily nest predators), with brett degregorio

I AM MAD FOR birds, so much so that I’ve been looking expectantly lately at the interactive migration maps on the Birdcast.info website, and browsing..
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April 22, 2020
9 Comments

3 variations on baked beans: sweet, smoky, spicy

THE FREEZERS WERE too tightly packed till now to do anything but choose the forward-facing foods. (Sound familiar?) But I’ve happily eaten my way to..
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April 21, 2020
7 Comments

my latest assignment: a series in ‘the new york times’

AN OUT-OF-THE-BLUE email in April 2020 shook me out of my “new normal” routine. It was an invitation from a “New York Times” editor to..
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April 17, 2020
373 Comments

cooking with what you have: ‘start simple,’ with lukas volger

JUST BEFORE THINGS SHIFTED in our world, I bought a new vegetarian cookbook called “Start Simple,” by Lukas Volger. Little did I know that just..
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April 11, 2020
547 Comments

dividing perennials (and some shrubs): when, why and how-to, with ken druse

ONE OF MY favorite books by our friend Ken Druse is called “Making More Plants,” and though it’s about all kinds of propagation, Ken and..
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April 3, 2020
7 Comments

must-grow cutting flowers, plus dahlia how-to, with jenny elliott

YES, YES, I KNOW; you plan to grow the usual rows of zinnias, but what other among organic flower farmer Jenny Elliott’s must-grow list of..
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Margaret Recommends

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

  • when to start seed
  • botanical treasures at far reaches farm nursery, with kelly dodson
  • our desert island plants: native spring woodland perennials, with ken druse
  • carrots: their history, challenges, and how to grow them, with breeder dr. phil simon
  • which echinacea perform best? with sam hoadley of mt. cuba center
  • the february garden chores
  • dreaming of a ‘new heirloom garden,’ with ellen ecker ogden
  • resources
  • my latest assignment: a series in ‘the new york times’
  • shopping for seed-starting grow lights, with leslie halleck

MY LATEST BOOK

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FROM THE WEEKLY PODCAST

smarter fall (and spring) cleanup, with doug tallamy

WHEN I TALKED to Doug Tallamy in February around the publication date of his latest book, “Nature’s Best Hope,” I didn’t want to go on and on about the advice in it regarding smart fall cleanup, which is one of the ways I know I’ve dramatically shifted the way I manage my own garden compared to 10 or even five years ago. But we were looking ahead to spring then, not fall.

I’m grateful that Doug returned to the podcast in autumn to do just that. Want to plan your most ecologically minded garden cleanup ever, and understand the consequences of each potential action you can take—including next spring?

The subtitle of University of Delaware professor Doug Tallamy’s recent book, “Nature’s Best Hope,” is “A New Approach to Conservation that Starts in Your Yard.” Meaning: The choices we make all year-round, including the very important one of how we clean up, can help counteract an overdeveloped, fragmented landscape that puts the food web to the test. You and I are nature’s best hope, and I’m glad Doug joined me again to help us learn to support it.

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

https://robinhoodradioondemand.com/podcast-player/17424/ecological-fall-cleanup-with-doug-tallamy-a-way-to-garden-with-margaret-roach-october-5-2020.mp3

Welcome! I’m Margaret Roach, a leading garden writer for 30 years—at ‘Martha Stewart Living,’ ‘Newsday,’ and in three books. I host a public-radio podcast; I also lecture, plus hold tours at my 2.3-acre Hudson Valley (NY) Zone 5B garden, and always say no to chemicals and yes to great plants.

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