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Low-Cost Ways to Improve Clay Soil

March 15, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Low-Cost Ways to Improve Clay Soil

Clay soil rarely wins popularity contests. It clumps like wet cement during rainy stretches and then bakes into brick when the sun turns fierce. Plants struggle to push roots through it, water lingers too long after storms, and many gardeners stare at the ground wondering if vegetables, flowers, or shrubs will ever cooperate. Yet clay…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard gardening, Budget Gardening, clay soil, composting, diy gardening, garden soil, gardening, landscaping tips, organic gardening, plant care, soil health, soil improvement, sustainable gardening

March Seedling Diseases to Watch For

March 15, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

March Seedling Diseases to Watch For

March launches the most exciting stretch of the gardening season. Tiny green sprouts push through soil, trays crowd windowsills, and gardeners start dreaming about towering tomatoes, crunchy cucumbers, and armloads of herbs. Those tiny seedlings promise big harvests later in the season, but they also attract a lineup of microscopic troublemakers that wait for exactly…

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Filed Under: seedlings Tagged With: botrytis, damping off, garden tips, gardening, indoor gardening, plant care, plant diseases, powdery mildew, seed starting, seedlings, spring gardening, vegetable gardening

How to Fix Soil pH Problems Naturally

March 15, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

How to Fix Soil pH Problems Naturally

Soil decides the fate of every garden long before the first tomato ripens or the first flower opens. Plants pull nutrients from soil like diners choosing dishes from a buffet, yet the menu changes completely when pH drifts too high or too low. A perfectly fertilized garden still struggles when the soil blocks those nutrients,…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard gardening, composting, garden soil, garden tips, gardening, natural gardening, organic gardening, plant health, soil amendments, soil health, soil ph, sustainable gardening

How to Reduce Root Rot Risk Without Chemicals

March 14, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

How to Reduce Root Rot Risk Without Chemicals

A thriving plant does not begin with glossy leaves or colorful blooms. Real strength starts underground, where roots wrestle with moisture, oxygen, microbes, and gravity every hour of the day. When conditions turn soggy and stagnant, roots lose that fight quickly, and root rot steps in to finish the job. Many gardeners reach for chemical…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: container gardening, drainage, garden maintenance, gardening, houseplants, organic gardening, overwatering, plant care tips, plant health, plant roots, root rot, soil health, sustainable gardening

March Fungal Diseases to Watch For

March 9, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

March Fungal Diseases to Watch For

March marks the moment when gardens wake up, but fungi wake up too. Damp soil, melting frost, chilly nights, and bursts of daytime warmth create a dream environment for plant diseases that thrive on moisture and instability. While gardeners often focus on planting schedules and soil preparation, fungal threats quietly prepare their own spring debut….

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: damping off, fungal diseases, garden tips, gardening, Home Gardening, plant care, plant disease prevention, plant fungus, plant health, powdery mildew, spring gardening

How to Repair Garden Tools Instead of Replacing Them

March 9, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

How to Repair Garden Tools Instead of Replacing Them

A worn garden tool does not deserve a trip to the trash. Most tools fail because of small problems: a loose bolt, a rusty edge, or a handle that lost its grip. A few minutes of attention can turn a tired shovel or stubborn pair of pruners back into a reliable workhorse. Repairing tools saves…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: diy gardening, garden tips, garden tools, gardening, home improvement, pruning shears repair, rust removal, sustainable gardening, tool maintenance, tool repair, yard work

A Backyard Material That Can Work as Well as Mulch

March 9, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

A Backyard Material That Can Work as Well as Mulch

Garden centers sell bags of mulch every spring, yet one of the most powerful soil protectors often piles up for free just a few steps away from the garden bed. Leaves scatter across lawns, patios, and driveways each year, and many people treat them like a nuisance that demands rakes and yard waste bags. That…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard gardening, composting, fallen leaves, garden maintenance, garden soil health, gardening, landscaping tips, mulch alternatives, organic gardening, sustainable gardening, weed control

Why Overwatering in March Wastes Money

March 8, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Why Overwatering in March Wastes Money

March often feels like the first real breath of spring, but plants do not always wake up at the right speed. Soil temperatures stay cool in many regions, and plant roots move nutrients and moisture slowly when the ground still holds winter’s chill. Throwing large amounts of water onto lawns or garden beds during this…

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Filed Under: watering Tagged With: gardening, home maintenance, irrigation tips, landscaping, March gardening, root rot prevention, soil moisture, spring lawn care, water bill savings, water saving

What Ants in Your Garden May Be Signaling

March 8, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

What Ants in Your Garden May Be Signaling

Ants marching across garden soil can feel like a tiny summer parade, except nobody sent invitations. Seeing them crawling around flower beds or near plant roots often sparks curiosity, because their presence does not always mean trouble is brewing beneath the dirt. Sometimes they are simply working hard at gathering food. Other times, they send…

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Filed Under: pests Tagged With: ant behavior, ants, ecology, garden insects, garden tips, gardening, Home Gardening, outdoor plants, pest control, soil health, yard care

March Is A Good Time to Divide Perennials (Depending on Your Zone)

March 7, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

March Is A Good Time to Divide Perennials (Depending on Your Zone)

March demands attention in the garden. Soil wakes up, sunlight lingers longer each afternoon, and many perennials prepare for a season of explosive growth. This moment creates a golden opportunity for one of the most useful garden skills: dividing perennials. Gardeners who split crowded plants in early spring unlock stronger growth, healthier roots, and more…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: dividing perennials, early spring garden tips, garden maintenance, garden zones, gardening, landscaping advice, perennial plants, Perennials, plant care, plant health, spring gardening

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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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