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Simple ways to save money while you garden

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frugal gardening

Why Gardeners in Texas Are Losing Entire Beds to This Soil-Borne Fungus

February 7, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

Why Gardeners in Texas Are Losing Entire Beds to This Soil-Borne Fungus

One week your peppers look fine, and the next week an entire section of the bed collapses like someone flipped a switch. In Texas, that “sudden wipeout” pattern is often tied to heat, humid nights, and a pathogen that hangs out in the soil waiting for the perfect moment—often southern blight (Sclerotium rolfsii). The frustrating…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: crop rotation, drip irrigation, frugal gardening, garden pests and problems, mulch tips, plant disease, raised beds, soil health, Texas gardening

Why Some States Are Now Paying Homeowners to Plant Native Wildflowers

February 7, 2026 by Catherine Reed 1 Comment

Why Some States Are Now Paying Homeowners to Plant Native Wildflowers

A few years ago, “planting for pollinators” sounded like a feel-good weekend project. Now, in some places, it can come with real money attached—rebates, cost-share grants, free coaching, or even discounted plants—because local governments are tired of paying for the same problems over and over. When a yard can soak up stormwater, reduce erosion, and…

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Filed Under: free plants Tagged With: backyard habitat, frugal gardening, low-maintenance landscaping, native plants, pollinator gardens, rain gardens, stormwater, sustainable gardening, wildflowers

Pet Owners Warned: This Common Yard Plant Is More Toxic Than You Think

February 6, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

Pet Owners Warned: This Common Yard Plant Is More Toxic Than You Think

If your yard has a glossy, fast-growing shrub that flowers like it’s trying to impress the whole neighborhood, it might be the common yard plant that worries vets the most. A lot of pet owners assume “ornamental” means safe, especially when the plant shows up everywhere from front walkways to pool fencing. The truth is…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: cat safety, dog health, frugal gardening, garden planning, landscaping on a budget, oleander, pet-safe gardening, toxic plants, yard safety

The Hidden Mold Problem Lurking in DIY Potting Mixes

February 6, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

The Hidden Mold Problem Lurking in DIY Potting Mixes

That white fuzz or musty smell showing up in a fresh batch of mix can feel like a gardening betrayal, especially when you made it yourself to save money. The good news is you usually don’t need fancy products to fix the problem—you need better moisture control, smarter storage, and a couple of cheap “reset”…

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Filed Under: gardening methods Tagged With: composting, container gardening, diy gardening, frugal gardening, fungus gnats, mold prevention, plant care, potting mix, soil health

The Indoor Gardening Setup Texans Love That Experts Say Is Wasting Your Money

February 3, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

The Indoor Gardening Setup Texans Love That Experts Say Is Wasting Your Money

Texas weather can make growing outside feel like a full-time job, so it’s no surprise that a lot of people bring herbs and greens indoors. The problem is that one popular indoor gardening setup looks sleek on a counter, promises “instant” harvests, and quietly drains your wallet with upgrades and refills that never seem to…

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Filed Under: gardening methods Tagged With: Budget Gardening, container gardening, DIY garden setup, frugal gardening, grow lights, herbs indoors, hydroponics, indoor gardening, seed starting

Experts Say These Dollar Store Garden Items Are Killing Plants in 2026

February 2, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

Experts Say These Dollar Store Garden Items Are Killing Plants in 2026

A bargain aisle can feel like a gardening jackpot, especially when you’re trying to grow more without spending more. But some dollar store finds don’t just “wear out faster”—they quietly sabotage drainage, scorch leaves, or introduce stress that plants can’t recover from. That’s why gardeners keep warning that a few dollar store garden items can…

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Filed Under: garden tools Tagged With: container gardening, dollar store hacks, drainage tips, frugal gardening, garden tools, potting mix, root rot prevention, seed starting

10 Garden Purchases That Sound Useful but Rarely Pay Off

January 31, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

10 Garden Purchases That Sound Useful but Rarely Pay Off

Garden aisles are designed to make everything look like a shortcut to a bigger harvest and a prettier yard. A clever label promises fewer weeds, richer soil, and “set it and forget it” results, which sounds perfect when you’re busy and your plants are struggling. The problem is that many garden purchases solve the wrong…

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Filed Under: product review Tagged With: budgeting, composting, container gardening, DIY garden tips, frugal gardening, garden tools, mulch, seed starting

Is Growing Herbs at Home Still a Money Saver?

January 31, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

Is Growing Herbs at Home Still a Money Saver?

A clamshell of basil that turns slimy in three days can make anyone dream about a little kitchen herb garden. Herbs feel like the perfect “cheap win” because they’re expensive per ounce at the store, and a single plant can look like it’ll supply you forever. But between seed packets, potting mix, containers, grow lights,…

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Filed Under: frugality Tagged With: Basil, container gardening, frugal gardening, garden budgeting, grow herbs indoors, herb garden, kitchen garden, mint

Gardeners Are Switching to Fewer Varieties to Cut Costs

January 29, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

Gardeners Are Switching to Fewer Varieties to Cut Costs

If your seed cart looks like a wish list and your garden beds look like a science experiment, you’re not alone. A lot of gardeners love trying every new tomato, pepper, and flower that shows up on social media, but those little packets add up fast. The surprise is that “more variety” doesn’t always mean…

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Filed Under: frugality Tagged With: Beginner Gardening, budget tips, frugal gardening, garden planning, homestead skills, seed-saving, succession planting, Vegetable Garden

Why January Is When Smart Gardeners Plan for Pest Cycles

January 29, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

Why January Is When Smart Gardeners Plan for Pest Cycles

January feels quiet in the garden, but it’s the loudest month for prevention. Pests don’t disappear in winter—they pause, hide, and wait for the exact conditions that show up when spring plants start pushing new growth. If you’ve ever felt like aphids, slugs, or squash bugs “came out of nowhere,” they didn’t. They were already…

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Filed Under: pests Tagged With: Beginner Gardening, crop rotation, frugal gardening, garden sanitation, integrated pest management, pest management, row covers, winter garden planning

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Why Grass Clippings Can Carry Herbicide Into Vegetable Beds

Why Grass Clippings Can Carry Herbicide Into Vegetable Beds

Fresh grass clippings look like free garden gold. They hold moisture, break down quickly, and seem like the perfect mulch for tomatoes, peppers, beans, and squash. That bargain can turn into an expensive mistake when those clippings contain herbicide residue. Many gardeners discover the problem only after vegetables twist, curl, stop growing, or produce strange-looking…

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The Cheap Mulch Materials That Can Damage Plants or Soil

The Cheap Mulch Materials That Can Damage Plants or Soil

Cheap mulch often looks like a smart way to stretch a gardening budget, but the lowest-priced option sometimes carries the highest hidden cost. Some materials rob soil of nutrients, spread pests, introduce weeds, or even release compounds that stress young plants. Saving a few dollars at the garden center means very little if flower beds…

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How to Tell If You’re Watering Deeply Enough

How to Tell If You’re Watering Deeply Enough

A quick sprinkle may make the soil look wet, but appearances fool plenty of gardeners. Plants need moisture well below the surface, where most of their roots search for water, nutrients, and stability. Deep watering encourages stronger root systems that handle hot afternoons and dry spells far better than plants that rely on frequent shallow…

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Can Tabletop Tomatoes Produce Enough Fruit to Be Worth the Space?

Can Tabletop Tomatoes Produce Enough Fruit to Be Worth the Space?

Tiny tomato plants sitting on a patio table look charming, but can they actually fill a salad bowl? The answer surprises many gardeners because the right tabletop tomato can produce a steady stream of flavorful fruit over an entire growing season when it receives proper care. That does not mean every miniature tomato deserves precious…

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