Summer used to feel predictable in the garden. A few hot days rolled in, plants perked up with regular watering, and everything settled into a steady rhythm of growth and color. Now the season feels less like a rhythm and more like a test of endurance. Heat arrives earlier, lingers longer, and sometimes shows up…
climate change
Why Gardeners in Texas Are Skipping Seed Catalogs This Year—and What They’re Doing Instead
The mailbox used to be the most exciting place for a Texas gardener in winter. Glossy seed catalogs promised perfect tomatoes, flawless zinnias, and harvests so abundant they bordered on fantasy. This year, though, something wild is happening across the Lone Star State. Those catalogs are piling up unopened, while gardeners are busy doing something…
How Climate Change Is Quietly Changing Fall Gardening Forever
Fall gardening used to be a predictable ritual—cool mornings, crisp evenings, and soil that practically begged to be planted. But lately, gardeners are looking around wondering why their pumpkins resemble beach balls, their mums are blooming in August, and the kale they planted is suddenly melting like it’s on a tropical vacation. Something strange is…


