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…
plant health
How to Revive Winter-Damaged Plants Without Replacing Them
Winter can feel like a quiet thief when it comes to gardens. One morning everything looks crisp and alive, and then a harsh cold spell leaves leaves drooping, stems darkening, and your beloved plants looking like they lost their spark overnight. The good news sits right there in the soil: many winter-damaged plants do not…
March Garden Pests That Show Up Before You Notice the Damage
March feels fresh and full of promise, but trouble already crawls through the garden long before flowers fully open. While many people focus on planting plans and new growth, several pests wake up early and begin feeding quietly. They rarely announce their arrival with dramatic destruction. Instead, they nibble, suck, bore, and chew just enough…
Why March Can Be the Cheapest Month to Tackle Big Garden Problems
March does not whisper. It announces opportunity. While many people wait for April blooms and May planting fever, March sits quietly in the background offering something better: leverage. Prices remain lower, contractors still answer calls, soil begins to warm, and plants prepare for active growth. Anyone who tackles major garden problems during this window often…
Experts Predict a Massive Aphid Explosion This Spring — Here’s Why
Something tiny, green, and relentless could swarm gardens in record numbers this spring. Aphids rarely command headlines, yet agricultural specialists and extension offices across the country already warn about conditions that favor explosive population growth. These soft-bodied insects reproduce at astonishing speed when temperatures stay mild and plants flush with tender new growth. A warm…
Why Aphids Are Swarming Earlier Than Ever in the Southeast
Aphids have not waited for summer to make their move this year. Gardeners across the Southeast have spotted clusters of tiny green, black, and even pink insects coating tender new growth weeks ahead of the usual schedule. The shift feels dramatic, but it follows patterns that scientists and extension agents have tracked for years. Warmer…
Experts Say a New Fungus Is Spreading Through Mulch in Georgia
A strange, foamy growth has started turning up in mulch beds across Georgia, and it doesn’t exactly blend in with the azaleas. In some yards, it looks like scrambled eggs dumped on the ground. In others, it forms bright yellow patches that seem to swell overnight. The sight alone can make anyone stop in their…
The Cheap Seed Starting Tray That’s Warping Roots and Killing Crops
A seedling can look perfectly healthy on top while chaos unfolds below the soil line. That bargain-bin seed tray sitting under grow lights might seem harmless, even practical, yet the wrong container can twist roots into tight spirals, stunt growth before transplant, and quietly sabotage an entire season’s harvest. Plenty of gardeners focus on soil…
Why Reusing Nursery Pots Without This Step Is Costing Gardeners Hundreds
Nursery pots might look harmless once a plant moves into the garden or a bigger container, but they carry invisible threats that hit both your plants and your budget. Every time soil clings to old pots, it brings more than dirt with it. Tiny fungi, bacteria, and other plant pathogens hide in those crevices, waiting…
Experts Say Aphid Populations Are Surging Faster Than Expected in the Southeast
A tiny insect with a soft body and a needle-like mouthpart now commands serious attention across the Southeast. Agricultural specialists and extension agents have started tracking unusually fast‑growing aphid populations moving aggressively through fields and gardens, leaving stressed plants and worried growers behind. While aphids rarely grab headlines, this surge carries real consequences for soybeans,…









