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Why More Families Are Growing “Survival Crops” Again

July 1, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Why More Families Are Growing “Survival Crops” Again

A quiet shift has started in backyards, community gardens, and even tiny raised beds. More families now fill their gardens with dependable crops that produce plenty of food instead of focusing only on colorful flowers or trendy vegetables. Grocery prices, unpredictable weather, and a growing interest in practical skills have inspired many people to revisit…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: beans, edible garden, food security, gardening tips, Home Gardening, potatoes, self‑sufficiency, squash, survival crops, vegetable gardening

Skip the Transplants: These Warm-Weather Veggies Excel When Direct-Sown Now

May 31, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Skip the Transplants: These Warm-Weather Veggies Excel When Direct-Sown Now

Late spring heat opens a golden window for gardeners who want fast, reliable crops without the stress of transplant shock. Many warm-weather vegetables perform better when seeds go straight into the soil instead of starting in trays indoors. Direct sowing helps roots establish naturally, which leads to stronger plants that handle summer heat with confidence….

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: beans, corn, cucumbers, direct sowing, gardening, gardening tips, Home Gardening, summer crops, Vegetable Garden, warm weather plants

6 Vegetables That Don’t Benefit From Expensive Soil Additives

January 27, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

These Are 6 Vegetables That Don’t Benefit From Expensive Soil Additives

Garden centers love to whisper sweet promises about miracle mixes and premium powders, but your vegetable patch doesn’t always fall for the hype. Some vegetables actually perform better when you stop trying to spoil them. They grow stronger roots, tastier harvests, and fewer problems when you let the soil stay simple and honest. If you’ve…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: beans, beets, carrots, Garden, garden tips, gardening, gardening tips, growing vegetables, healthy soil, onions, peas, planting vegetables, radishes, soil, soil additives, soil health, Vegetable Garden

6 Vegetables That Don’t Need Premium Fertilizers

January 6, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

6 Vegetables That Don’t Need Premium Fertilizers

Gardening doesn’t have to feel like a high-stakes science experiment fueled by fancy bags of nutrients and mysterious formulas. There’s a special kind of thrill in discovering that some vegetables actually thrive when you keep things simple and let nature do more of the heavy lifting. These are the plants that don’t demand luxury treatment,…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: beans, diy fertilizer, fertilizer, fertilizing, Garden, gardening, gardening tips, kale, nutrients, potatoes, radishes, soil nutrients, turnips, vegetable, Vegetable Garden, zucchini

11 Seeds to Store in Paper Bags This Fall

November 19, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

There Are Certain Seeds You Should Store in Paper Bags This Fall

Fall arrives like a friendly reminder that your garden’s greatest treasures aren’t the blossoms you admired all summer—it’s the seeds hiding inside them. There’s something wildly satisfying about gathering those tiny future-plants and tucking them away like secret investments for spring. Storing seeds in paper bags feels old-school in the best possible way: simple, reliable,…

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Filed Under: seeds Tagged With: Basil, beans, calendula, Cosmos, dill, free seeds, growing seedlings, marigolds, pepper, pumpkins, seed, Seedling care, seedling space, seedlings, seeds, sunflowers, tomatoes, zinnia

10 Crops That Attract Mice if Left Uncovered

November 18, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Some Crops Attract Mice If Left Uncovered

The moment you leave a crop unattended, mice treat it like an all-you-can-eat buffet with no closing hours. These little opportunists have a talent for sniffing out anything remotely edible, and once they discover your unprotected produce, they’ll invite their entire extended family. What starts as a tiny nibble can turn into a miniature disaster…

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Filed Under: pests Tagged With: barley, beans, Choosing crops, control pests, corn, crops, garden pest control, garden pests, gardening and pests, garlic, mice, mouse, potatoes, squash, sunflower seeds, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, wheat

Collect These Seeds Now — You’ll Thank Yourself in April

November 9, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

You Should Collect Certain Seeds Now Before Your April Bloom

We all know that there is a specific kind of magic that happens when spring finally arrives. The world stretches awake, the soil softens, and suddenly every neighbor with a porch pot becomes a garden philosopher. But here’s the secret the seasoned growers know: your April garden dreams actually start now, while fall and winter…

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Filed Under: seeds Tagged With: basil seeds, beans, buy seeds, calendula, choosing seeds, Cosmos, dill, direct seeding, DIY seed starting, growing seedlings, indoor seeds, marigolds, outdoor seeds, spring, spring bloom, spring blooms, spring bulbs, spring garden, spring garden tips, spring gardening, sunflowers, zinnias

6 Things You Should Never Plant Next to Each Other

September 24, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

There are certain things you should never plant next to each other.

Gardens are like neighborhoods—some residents get along perfectly, while others just can’t stop causing drama. A mismatched planting can mean stunted growth, pest parties, or even plants fighting over the same nutrients. Some crops thrive when paired with companions, but others become full-blown rivals if forced to share space. Knowing which plants to keep apart…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard garden, backyard gardens, beans, beginner gardeners, Beginner gardening guide, Beginner gardening tools, best plants, cabbage, carrots, corn, cucumbers, dill, dividing plants, gardening dangers, gardening tips, onions, plants, potatoes, sage, strawberries, tomatoes

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Composting in Hot Weather: How Turning and Moisture Control Speed Up Decomposition

Composting in Hot Weather: How Turning and Moisture Control Speed Up Decomposition

Hot weather can turn a compost pile into a fast-moving recycling machine, but only when the balance stays just right. Summer heat gives beneficial microbes a natural boost, yet blazing temperatures can also dry out a pile so quickly that decomposition slows to a crawl. A few simple habits, especially regular turning and careful moisture…

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Attract Hummingbirds and Butterflies with Native Flowering Trees and Shrubs—A Pollinator Garden Guide

Attract Hummingbirds and Butterflies with Native Flowering Trees and Shrubs—A Pollinator Garden Guide

A garden filled with fluttering butterflies and darting hummingbirds never feels ordinary. Native flowering trees and shrubs turn even a simple backyard into a lively destination packed with color, movement, and the gentle buzz of pollinators hard at work. The best part? These plants already belong in the local landscape, so they fit naturally into…

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Save Seeds, Save Money: Harvest, Dry and Store Seeds from This Year’s Favorite Heirloom Plants

Save Seeds, Save Money: Harvest, Dry and Store Seeds from This Year’s Favorite Heirloom Plants

Saving seeds from favorite heirloom plants stretches a gardening budget while preserving varieties that earned a permanent place in the garden. A handful of carefully collected seeds can grow into baskets of tomatoes, colorful flowers, or crisp beans next season without another trip to the garden center. Better yet, seed saving turns the end of…

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NJ’s Invasive Species Act Bans Bradford Pear, Norway Maple and Other Ornamentals—What to Plant Instead

NJ’s Invasive Species Act Bans Bradford Pear, Norway Maple and Other Ornamentals—What to Plant Instead

A familiar landscape is about to look a little different across New Jersey. The state’s Invasive Species Act now prohibits the sale and distribution of several ornamental plants that spent decades filling suburban yards, shopping centers, and neighborhood streets. While some gardeners may feel disappointed to see old favorites disappear, the change opens the door…

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