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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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April 2, 2020
16 Comments

hope is the thing with cotyledons, and other spring 2020 instagram thoughts

IT FEELS LIKE 100 YEARS, but it has “only” been about a month. I know because I checked in my calendar for the week where..
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March 27, 2020
10 Comments

the power of seeds, and of sunflowers, with ken greene

BEFORE THE WEEKS got darker, Ken Greene and I had planned a chat about a sunny subject: sunflowers. Ken is co-founder of Hudson Valley Seed..
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March 20, 2020
85 Comments

finding refuge in our gardens, and hope in a hoya, with ken druse

IT’S THURSDAY, March 19th, 2020, as Ken Druse and I are taping this show from our respective homes via Skype. In my weekly newsletter last..
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Homegrown heirloom tomatoes1
March 19, 2020
36 Comments

16 things i know about growing tomatoes

FROM THE FIRST SEED SOWN to the last fruit stashed in the freezer, homegrown tomatoes are a labor of love. Whether it’s tomato-sowing time (as..
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March 14, 2020
257 Comments

composting smart (including in a pit!), with ‘the new gardener’s handbook’ author daryl beyers

WHAT’S YOUR composting setup? Bin, tumbler or open pile—or maybe even an ingenious set of three pits in the ground (that’s one pit, above)? And..
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March 6, 2020
347 Comments

create a pollinator victory garden, with kim eierman

ONE OF THE MOST common questions that garden centers and other garden professionals are asked these days: How can I add more pollinator plants? Kim..
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Type 3 Clematis pruning diagramf
March 4, 2020
86 Comments

fear not! how to prune clematis, with dan long

ONE OF MY FAVORITE lines ever in a garden book: vintage Christopher Lloyd, the late daring plantsman of Great Dixter in England, in his Clematis..
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March 4, 2020
55 Comments

growing hellebores, with judith knott tyler

ON A FORMER Virginia tobacco farm that was in her family for six generations, Judith Knott Tyler and her husband, Dick, spent 30ish years breeding..
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February 28, 2020
273 Comments

women in the plant world: ‘the earth in her hands,’ with jennifer jewell

I’M A WOMAN who’s made a good portion of her career in the field of horticulture, specifically in the journalism end of the plant world...
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February 22, 2020
24 Comments

which native plants, and how to make room for them, with ken druse

GARDENERS INCLUDING myself want to add more, more, more native plants to their landscapes to support pollinators and birds and other native wildlife, but what..
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Lee Reich's netted blueberry "gazebo"l
February 20, 2020
593 Comments

lee reich’s blueberry-growing how-to

DON’T SAY ‘I CAN’T GROW BLUEBERRIES,’ says Lee Reich, whose PhD explored factors affecting the growth of Vaccinium corymbosum, the highbush blueberry. “Follow the prescription..
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February 14, 2020
3 Comments

telling seed stories, with organic breeder rachel hultengren

CALL ME A SEED NERD and I won’t mind because yes, I’m obsessed with where seed comes from and specifically how critical it is to..
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Salix chaenomeloidesp
February 13, 2020
54 Comments

pruning willow, and the best salix varieties

‘IT’S ENDLESS,” plantsman Michael Dodge of Vermont Willow Nursery was saying over the phone, alluding to the possibilities of the genus Salix—the willows to which..
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Raised bed of potato plantsg
February 12, 2020
139 Comments

growing potatoes organically: when and how to plant, hill and harvest

A FRIEND I BUY seed potatoes with and I were scratching our heads as we filled out the order form, blanking on the line where..
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February 7, 2020
509 Comments

how conservation starts in your yard: doug tallamy on ‘nature’s best hope’

‘NATURE’S BEST HOPE’ is the title of University of Delaware professor Doug Tallamy’s new book, and the subtitle reads like this: “A New Approach to..
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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

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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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