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composting

8 Ways to Reduce Garden Waste Before the Growing Season Starts

January 29, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Here Are 8 Ways to Reduce Garden Waste Before the Growing Season Starts

Spring will be here before you know it! One minute the beds are quiet and muddy, and the next you’re knee-deep in seed trays, pruners, and piles of leftover debris from last year. Before the growing season truly kicks off, there’s a golden opportunity to reduce garden waste, save time, and make your garden healthier…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: composting, eco-friendly tips, garden tips, garden waste reduction, gardening, gardening tips, spring, spring garden prep, spring gardening, sustainable gardening

8 Low-Cost Ways to Improve Garden Soil Structure

January 25, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

8 Low-Cost Ways to Improve Garden Soil Structure

If your garden soil turns into a brick when it’s dry or a swamp when it’s wet, the plants aren’t being dramatic—the soil is. The good news is you don’t need expensive amendments or a truckload of topsoil to make a real difference. With a few budget-friendly habits, you can build healthier pores, better drainage,…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: clay soil, composting, cover crops, frugal gardening, garden tips, leaf mold, mulch, organic matter, raised beds, soil health

8 Winter Compost Additives That Speed Up Breakdown

January 22, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

8 Winter Compost Additives That Speed Up Breakdown

Winter composting can feel like watching paint dry, except the paint is frozen and the “dry” part is literal. Cold slows microbes, your pile shrinks less, and kitchen scraps seem to sit there forever. The trick isn’t buying fancy accelerators—it’s feeding the biology and fixing the pile’s basic comfort needs. With the right mix of…

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Filed Under: composting Tagged With: backyard compost, brown materials, compost additives, composting, frugal gardening, kitchen scraps, nitrogen sources, soil health, Winter Composting

7 Things You Should Never Compost in Winter—Even If You Do in Summer

January 19, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

7 Things You Should Never Compost in Winter—Even If You Do in Summer

Winter composting can feel like a free pass to toss anything into the pile and “let it sort itself out later.” The problem is that cold slows decomposition, which means the wrong scraps don’t break down—they just sit there and create pests, smells, and springtime headaches. If you want finished compost sooner (and less mess),…

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Filed Under: composting Tagged With: compost bin tips, composting, frugal gardening, garden pests, kitchen scraps, organic gardening, soil health, Sustainable Living, Winter Composting

This One Winter Gardening Habit Could Be Attracting Rats—Here’s How to Fix It Fast

January 18, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

This One Winter Gardening Habit Could Be Attracting Rats—Here’s How to Fix It Fast

Cold air, quiet beds, and a garden that finally gets a breather—winter feels calm and harmless. But beneath that peaceful surface, rats are actively apartment-hunting, and your garden may be flashing a giant “vacancy” sign. One common winter gardening habit creates warmth, shelter, and food all in one neat bundle, and rodents absolutely love it….

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Filed Under: pests Tagged With: compost, compost piles, composting, controlling pests, garden debris, garden pests, gardening and pests, leaf heaps, mice, pest, pest control, pests, rats, rodents, Winter Garden, winter garden habit, winter gardening, winter gardening habit

Why Your Raised Beds Might Be Harboring Pests Right Now—Even in Freezing Temps

January 18, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Here Is Why Your Raised Beds Might Be Harboring Pests Right Now—Even in Freezing Temps

Winter feels like a reset button for the garden, a clean slate where everything troublesome gets wiped out by cold. Yet raised beds often keep secrets through frost, snow, and ice, and some of them wriggle. While the surface looks quiet and frozen solid, life below can be surprisingly busy. Soil, wood, mulch, and compost…

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Filed Under: pests Tagged With: backyard pest infestations, cold weather garden, compost, composting, flower bed, flower beds, freezing temperatures, frozen temperatures, garden pest control, garden pests, microclimate, mulch, mulching, perennial beds, pest, pest control, pests, raised bed, raised beds, raised garden bed, winter, Winter Garden, winter gardening

7 Things Gardeners Regret Not Doing in January—Don’t Make These Costly Mistakes

January 18, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

These Are 7 Things Gardeners Regret Not Doing in January

January doesn’t look flashy in the garden, but it quietly decides who will be smiling come spring and who will be scrambling. While beds nap under frost and seed catalogs pile up on the coffee table, important opportunities are ticking by. This is the month where small choices ripple into big wins—or lingering regrets. Gardeners…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: cold weather garden, compost, compost piles, composting, Garden, garden bed, garden plan, garden tips, garden tools, gardening tips, ground soil, healthy soil, January, January garden, ordering seeds, Perennials, planting seeds, seeds, soil, soil testing, winter, Winter Garden, winter gardening, Winter Gardening Tips

6 Soil Additives That Could Backfire in Cold Weather—Experts Warn to Skip These in January

January 17, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

These Are 6 Soil Additives That Could Backfire in Cold Weather

January gardening can feel bold, hopeful, and just a little rebellious. While frost glitters on the ground, it’s tempting to “get ahead” by amending soil and setting the stage for spring. That urge is understandable—and risky. Cold, often frozen soil behaves very differently than warm earth, and certain soil additives can do more harm than…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: bone meal, compost, compost tips, composting, fertilizer, Garden, garden tips, gardening, gardening tips, January, manure, ph levels, Winter Garden, winter weather

Extension Offices Are Sounding the Alarm on This Popular Compost Ingredient

January 17, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Extension Offices Are Sounding the Alarm on This Popular Compost Ingredient

Sirens aren’t blaring, but county extension offices are definitely waving their arms. Gardeners who proudly pile up kitchen scraps and yard waste are being urged to pause before tossing in one especially common material. What looks like harmless green gold can actually cause stunted plants, twisted leaves, and a season’s worth of frustration. The surprise…

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Filed Under: composting Tagged With: compost, compost bins, compost garden, compost layering, compost mistakes, composting, composting safely, extension office, gardeners, grass, grass clippings, herbicides, safe compost

Why You Shouldn’t Compost These 3 Things—Even If TikTok Says It’s Fine

January 16, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Why You Shouldn’t Compost These 3 Things—Even If TikTok Says It’s Fine

Composting can feel like a magic trick: scraps disappear, and your garden seems to thank you with richer soil and healthier plants. But not all kitchen scraps belong in the compost pile. Those viral TikTok compost hacks might look convincing, but some of them could actually harm your compost, attract pests, or slow down the…

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Filed Under: composting Tagged With: coffee, coffee grounds, coffee pods, Cold Weather Composting, compost, compost tips, composting, composting at home, composting bins, Composting Tips, cooked food, garden pests, greasy food, leftovers, pests, social media trends, tiktok

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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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