Vegetable Garden Tools to Add to Your Shed This Year - FineGardening
Vegetable Garden Tools to Add to Your Shed This Year - FineGardening
An inexpensive gadget to keep vining plants in check In the veggie garden, you often need to tie a plant to a stake to keep it upright. When I’m doing…
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An inexpensive gadget to keep vining plants in check In the veggie garden, you often need to tie a plant to a stake to keep it upright. When I’m doing…
An inexpensive gadget to keep vining plants in check In the veggie garden, you often need to tie a plant to a stake to keep it upright. When I’m doing…
Enjoying fragrance in the garden is an experience most gardeners appreciate and strive for. Our woody plants, such as lilac (Syringa spp. and cvs., Zones 3–8) and Koreanspice viburnum (Viburnum carlesii and cvs., Zones 5–9), as well as perennials such as fragrant pinks (Dianthus spp. and cvs., Zones 3–10) and garden phlox (Phlox paniculata and cvs., Zones 4–8) provide wonderful windows of scent. However, it is the seasonal plants in our Midwest gardens that will contribute extended fragr...
Enjoying fragrance in the garden is an experience most gardeners appreciate and strive for. Our woody plants, such as lilac (Syringa spp. and cvs., Zones 3–8) and Koreanspice viburnum (Viburnum carlesii and cvs., Zones 5–9), as well as perennials such as fragrant pinks (Dianthus spp. and cvs., Zones 3–10) and garden phlox (Phlox paniculata and cvs., Zones 4–8) provide wonderful windows of scent. However, it is the seasonal plants in our Midwest gardens that will contribute extended fragr...
Gardening season is here! Now is the time to get out your garden gloves and tackle your veggie garden needs. Planting, mulching, and general tending are on the calendar, and the tools for the veggie garden listed below can help you do all of it. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. Veggie Garden Essentials Heavy-duty gardening gloves that will last for years Photo: Andy Pulte Life is too short, and I garden too much to waste my time on cheapo gloves. They need to be comfort...
Gardening season is here! Now is the time to get out your garden gloves and tackle your veggie garden needs. Planting, mulching, and general tending are on the calendar, and the tools for the veggie garden listed below can help you do all of it. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. Veggie Garden Essentials Heavy-duty gardening gloves that will last for years Photo: Andy Pulte Life is too short, and I garden too much to waste my time on cheapo gloves. They need to be comfort...
It’s hot. And the last thing anyone wants to do is spend more time on maintenance in the garden than they have to. Thankfully, garden tool companies have heard their complaints and have developed a myriad of tools to help gardeners get chores done faster so that they can get back to enjoying the fruits of their labor. From weeding and pruning to keeping the garden healthy and well-watered, the products featured below will ensure that you can get back to your book and mimosa in no time. As an...
It’s hot. And the last thing anyone wants to do is spend more time on maintenance in the garden than they have to. Thankfully, garden tool companies have heard their complaints and have developed a myriad of tools to help gardeners get chores done faster so that they can get back to enjoying the fruits of their labor. From weeding and pruning to keeping the garden healthy and well-watered, the products featured below will ensure that you can get back to your book and mimosa in no time. As an...
Christina Tyzzer is sharing a look back at the gardening year with us as we move into fall. We garden in Indiana in Zone 6a. It has been a hot, dry year, and so a bit challenging, but we learn so much through these challenges. Here is a look at our 2022 garden. The vegetable garden is promising a great harvest in a few short months! We did learn that the tomatoes cannot be tied to our 6-foot fence next year, as those red globes are just too enticing to the chickens! They got all of the first fru...
Christina Tyzzer is sharing a look back at the gardening year with us as we move into fall. We garden in Indiana in Zone 6a. It has been a hot, dry year, and so a bit challenging, but we learn so much through these challenges. Here is a look at our 2022 garden. The vegetable garden is promising a great harvest in a few short months! We did learn that the tomatoes cannot be tied to our 6-foot fence next year, as those red globes are just too enticing to the chickens! They got all of the first fru...
I’m Katie. I’m a proud Midwesterner, and all of these photos are from my Indiana backyard garden. By day, I am a licensed and certified speech-language pathologist. By weekend and summer, I turn full-fledged gardener and spend most of my time in my humble backyard paradise. About six years ago, I began transforming our empty, desolate, almost full-acre yard to rich, healthy ecosystems in the form of garden beds, shrubs, and trees. In addition to this, I “raise” monarchs and proudly wear ...
I’m Katie. I’m a proud Midwesterner, and all of these photos are from my Indiana backyard garden. By day, I am a licensed and certified speech-language pathologist. By weekend and summer, I turn full-fledged gardener and spend most of my time in my humble backyard paradise. About six years ago, I began transforming our empty, desolate, almost full-acre yard to rich, healthy ecosystems in the form of garden beds, shrubs, and trees. In addition to this, I “raise” monarchs and proudly wear ...
Today’s photos are from Dede Lifgren. Welcome to my garden in Brewster, New York (Zone 6a). I am an artist and garden lover. Much of my artwork centers around my garden. Or is it the other way around? Either way, I love to take full advantage of both! My pineapple columns and some potted impatiens (Impatiens walleriana, Zones 10–11 or as an annual) greet visitors at the entryway. In the main garden, trickling water can be heard from the fountain as you enter the property. A cypress (Chamaecy...
Today’s photos are from Dede Lifgren. Welcome to my garden in Brewster, New York (Zone 6a). I am an artist and garden lover. Much of my artwork centers around my garden. Or is it the other way around? Either way, I love to take full advantage of both! My pineapple columns and some potted impatiens (Impatiens walleriana, Zones 10–11 or as an annual) greet visitors at the entryway. In the main garden, trickling water can be heard from the fountain as you enter the property. A cypress (Chamaecy...
If your planting lacks flair in certain seasons, try taking some inspiration from our list of favorites from this exceptional New England garden. Photo: Carol Collins ‘Goldtau’ tufted hair grass (Deschampsia cespitosa ‘Goldtau’) Zones: 3–8 Size: 2 to 3 feet tall and wide Conditions: Full sun to partial shade; average to moist, well-drained soil Native Range: Temperate zones of North America, Europe, and Asia One of the few ornamental grasses that can take some shade, ‘Goldtau’ look...
If your planting lacks flair in certain seasons, try taking some inspiration from our list of favorites from this exceptional New England garden. Photo: Carol Collins ‘Goldtau’ tufted hair grass (Deschampsia cespitosa ‘Goldtau’) Zones: 3–8 Size: 2 to 3 feet tall and wide Conditions: Full sun to partial shade; average to moist, well-drained soil Native Range: Temperate zones of North America, Europe, and Asia One of the few ornamental grasses that can take some shade, ‘Goldtau’ look...
Today we’re visiting with Elaine Esposito. My love for gardening started over 60 years ago when my grandfather, who lived next door, had every variety of flower on his very small lot. He grew poppies, roses, irises, strawflowers, and so many perennials that I now I have in my gardens. My gardens started small but grew larger every year as I experimented with what I could grow to coexist with the many animals who loved them as much as me. I also wanted to enjoy the flowers with the changing wea...
Today we’re visiting with Elaine Esposito. My love for gardening started over 60 years ago when my grandfather, who lived next door, had every variety of flower on his very small lot. He grew poppies, roses, irises, strawflowers, and so many perennials that I now I have in my gardens. My gardens started small but grew larger every year as I experimented with what I could grow to coexist with the many animals who loved them as much as me. I also wanted to enjoy the flowers with the changing wea...
Kat Kinch sent in today’s photos of a garden transformation. My mom, Pat, a retired teacher, was increasingly concerned that a huge, old red maple in close proximity to her house would one day end up in her bedroom in a summer storm. With no small amount of regret, she decided to have it taken down. While she breathed easier when gusts arrived, the space the old tree formerly occupied was left an arid slope. She missed the leafy shade, and the dry ground and network of roots made new planting ...
Kat Kinch sent in today’s photos of a garden transformation. My mom, Pat, a retired teacher, was increasingly concerned that a huge, old red maple in close proximity to her house would one day end up in her bedroom in a summer storm. With no small amount of regret, she decided to have it taken down. While she breathed easier when gusts arrived, the space the old tree formerly occupied was left an arid slope. She missed the leafy shade, and the dry ground and network of roots made new planting ...