Thoughtful planting is the secret to bringing the flavor of France to your outside space, with aromatic flowers, herbs and ...
Spring has sprung, and for gardeners it's undoubtedly an exciting time of the year! The opportunity to spend some quality time enjoying your outdoor space is very welcome after the long, dark winter.
I love, for example, the sulphur-yellow crocuses flowering their socks off beneath the garden’s beech trees, the gilded ...
If you want to make your garden look like a mini woodland this spring, a gardener has shared five flowers you should consider ...
Why should we be embracing this messy look? Does rewilding mean we simply leave our back gardens to get on with it and fill themselves with nettles? Emphatically not. In fact, allowing one or two weed ...
Add movement and texture to the garden with this graceful grass-like evergreen. The gracefully arching leaf blades of ...
Just because we’ve already enjoyed a couple months of flowers by June doesn’t mean we should give up on the rest of the year ...
Herbs enjoy sun all day and need at least six hours of direct sun to produce high amounts of flavorful oils. Many herbs ...
As a perennial, mint dies back to the ground each winter and reemerges in spring. A single mint plant can live for up to five years, but the plant is easily divided, so it can provide a continuous ...
Campbell Vaughn: Sourwood, goldenrod, oakleaf hydrangea among top native plants for Georgia ...
Rhubarb is an ideal edible plant for the central Ohio home gardener ... Rhubarb (Rheum rhabarbarum) belongs to the Buckwheat ...