A thriving garden should signal growth, color, and life. It should not signal structural danger. Yet the soil and mulch that nourish flowers and shrubs can also create the perfect front door for termites. These insects do not charge in dramatically. They work quietly, steadily, and with purpose. Catching their early signs around garden beds…
home improvement
Why Many Gardeners Wait Until Mid-March to Buy Mulch
The calendar may say spring begins in March, but seasoned gardeners know that timing matters more than dates. Walk through any garden center in early March and the stacks of mulch look tempting, fresh, and ready to spread. Yet many experienced hands pause, wait, and circle back closer to mid-month. That choice does not come…
The $5 Tool That Replaces Several Expensive Ones
A single five-dollar tool can knock out nails, pry apart boards, tap bricks into place, crack open stubborn crates, and even help tidy up a garden bed. That tool does not plug in, does not need batteries, and does not demand a special charging station in the garage. It fits in one hand, slides into…
Why Termite Activity Can Increase Around Gardens in Early Spring
Spring doesn’t just wake up flowers and fruit trees. It wakes up termites too. As soon as soil temperatures begin to rise and spring rains soak the ground, subterranean termites shift into high gear. Gardens, with their rich soil, regular watering, and constant organic material, create a near-perfect staging ground for these insects. While lush…
The Cheap Gardening Hack That’s Actually Killing Your Plants
A yard covered in tidy stones might look sharp and low-maintenance, but that bargain-bin decision could quietly sabotage every plant in sight. Garden centers stack bags of decorative rock and gravel near the entrance for a reason. The price looks reasonable, the promise of “no more mulching every year” sounds irresistible, and the clean, modern…
Is Your Garden Raising Your Property Value (And Taxes)?
A lush, carefully designed garden can turn an ordinary house into the kind of place that makes people slow down as they drive by. Flowering trees frame the entryway, layered shrubs soften the edges, and a healthy lawn stretches out like a green welcome mat. It looks good. It feels good. It even smells good…
Why Your Garden Fence Could Be a Death Trap for Local Wildlife
A fence looks like control. It tells the world where your space begins and ends. But to a fox, a hedgehog, or a deer moving through its nightly route, that fence can feel like a wall that suddenly blocks a path used for generations. In some cases, it does more than block. It traps, injures,…
This Budget-Friendly Mulch Is Actually Acidifying Your Soil
The bags look harmless stacked near the garden center entrance. They promise moisture retention, weed control, and a polished finish around shrubs and trees. Yet that budget-friendly mulch many homeowners toss into their carts can quietly shift soil chemistry in ways that reshape the entire garden. And the changes it makes can’t be reversed quickly….
The $5 Tool That’s Breaking and Ruining Raised Beds Across the South
Raised beds don’t collapse on their own. Something causes the wood to bow, the soil to sour, and the tomatoes to stall out midseason. And in gardens across the South, that culprit often costs less than a fast-food lunch. Walk through any big-box hardware store in spring and stacks of black landscape fabric promise easy…
Stormwater Experts Say This Landscaping Trend Is Flooding Basements
Water always wins. It ignores good intentions, glossy design magazines, and backyard dreams. When heavy rain hits a yard that cannot absorb it, that water moves with purpose, and too often it heads straight toward the foundation. Across the country, stormwater professionals have started pointing fingers at a landscaping trend that looks polished on social…









