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soil

The Importance of Crop Rotation

March 9, 2021 by Steph Coelho Leave a Comment

crop rotation

  It’s that time of year again! Gardeners are starting to plan out the season. Usually, I spend this month sketching out a rough plan for my garden—taking crop rotation principles into account. I also start some seeds in my basement. This year, though, the pandemic has me changing up my plans. I’m giving my…

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Filed Under: gardening methods Tagged With: crop rotation, garden planning, healthy soil, soil

5 Things To Consider When Recycling Soil

March 1, 2021 by Steph Coelho Leave a Comment

soil recycling checklist

  It’s the end of the growing season, and you’ve tossed your spent container tomato plants in the compost. Can you reuse the soil next year? Here’s a soil recycling checklist to go through before repotting plants in old soil or using last year’s soil leftovers in the spring. Pitfalls of Recycling Soil Reusing soil…

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Filed Under: container gardening, frugality, saving money Tagged With: recycling soil, reusing soil, saving soil, soil

Why You Should Test Your Soil

July 20, 2020 by Steph Coelho Leave a Comment

test your soil

  Along with water and sunlight, soil is the lifeblood of a garden. Without healthy, nutrient-filled soil, plants simply won’t thrive. It’s tempting to believe that spraying your garden with fertilizer will encourage lush growth. But if you’re spraying without testing your soil, you may be in for trouble down the line. Why should you…

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Filed Under: garden tools Tagged With: fertilizer, soil, soil testing

How Much Dirt Does my Raised Bed Garden Need?

November 25, 2019 by Steph Coelho Leave a Comment

One of the benefits of raised bed gardening is the ability to use your own soil mix. It’s a serious advantage for those stuck living in places where the soil quality is poor or where there’s no soil to speak of (e.g., those who have a concrete yard).  But how do you figure out how…

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: compost, earth, raised bed, raised garden bed, soil

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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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