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weed control

How to Identify Invasive Weeds Early

March 12, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

How to Identify Invasive Weeds Early

A garden can appear totally fine and calm on the surface while a quiet invasion brews and builds underground. One tiny weed sprouts, another follows, and suddenly an aggressive plant starts pushing out everything in its path. Invasive weeds don’t politely share space with vegetables, flowers, or shrubs. They compete hard for sunlight, water, and…

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Filed Under: weeds Tagged With: backyard gardening, garden health, garden maintenance, gardening tips, invasive plants, invasive weeds, landscaping tips, organic gardening, plant identification, weed control, weed identification, weed prevention

Why Cardboard Is a Useful Tool for Gardeners

March 9, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Why Cardboard Is a Useful Tool for Gardeners

A pile of cardboard might look like recycling, but in the garden it becomes a quiet powerhouse. Gardeners constantly battle weeds, stubborn soil, and endless chores, yet one humble material tackles all three at once. Cardboard suppresses weeds, protects soil, feeds beneficial organisms, and helps create new garden beds without heavy digging. Anyone who spends…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard gardening, cardboard gardening, composting, garden hacks, garden preparation, gardening tips, mulch alternatives, organic gardening, soil health, sustainable gardening, weed control

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

March Weeds That Spread Quickly If You Ignore Them

March 3, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

March Weeds That Spread Quickly If You Ignore Them

Spring: the soil warms, the light stretches longer, and suddenly green shoots explode across lawns and garden beds. Some of that growth brings promise. Some of it comes with a plan to take over everything in sight. March marks the turning point for many of the most aggressive weeds in the country. These plants waste…

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Filed Under: weeds Tagged With: chickweed, crabgrass, dandelions, gardening, henbit, home landscaping, invasive plants, lawn care, purple deadnettle, spring yard work, weed control, yard maintenance

Why March Can Be the Cheapest Month to Tackle Big Garden Problems

March 1, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

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…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard projects, garden budget tips, garden planning, landscaping savings, lawn repair, March gardening, plant health, pruning tips, seasonal gardening, soil preparation, spring yard work, weed control

The Cheap Gardening Hack That’s Actually Killing Your Plants

February 28, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

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…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard garden, compost, DIY mistakes, gardening, home improvement, mulch, mulch mistakes, plant care, rock mulch, soil health, sustainable gardening, weed control, yard maintenance

This Backyard Weed Is Hosting a Virus That’s Killing Tomato Plants

February 26, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

This Backyard Weed Is Hosting a Virus That’s Killing Tomato Plants

You can nurture your tomato plants like prized pets, water them with care, stake them upright, feed them rich compost—and still watch them twist, yellow, and collapse. Sometimes the threat doesn’t arrive in a storm or crawl in on six legs. Sometimes it waits quietly in the weeds. One of the most overlooked dangers in…

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Filed Under: weeds Tagged With: backyard gardening, black nightshade, garden pests, home gardening tips, nightshade weeds, plant viruses, thrips, tomato disease, tomato plants, tomato spotted wilt virus, vegetable gardening, weed control

The $5 Tool That’s Breaking and Ruining Raised Beds Across the South

February 22, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

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…

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Filed Under: garden tools Tagged With: backyard garden, drainage problems, gardening, home improvement, landscape fabric, mulch, raised beds, soil health, southern gardening, sustainable gardening, Vegetable Garden, weed control

New HOA Rules That Are Changing How People Garden in 2026

January 27, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Some New HOA Rules Are Changing How People Garden in 2026

The gardening world inside HOA (Homeowners Association) neighborhoods has officially entered its plot-twist era. What once felt like a rigid checklist of green grass, trimmed hedges, and zero personality now looks wildly different as 2026 unfolds. Boards, residents, and even city governments have pushed gardening rules into new territory that rewards creativity, sustainability, and community…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard gardens, food gardens, Garden, garden design, garden tips, gardening, HOA, HOA rules, HOAs, homeowners, homeowners association, homeowners association rules, homeownership, lawn care, native plants, pollinators, sustainability, weed control

State Experts Warn: This Invasive Vine Is Spreading Faster Than Expected

January 24, 2026 by Catherine Reed Leave a Comment

State Experts Warn: This Invasive Vine Is Spreading Faster Than Expected

If you’ve noticed a twining plant suddenly showing up in new corners of your yard, you’re not imagining things. In several states, black swallow-wort (also called dog-strangling vine) has been turning up more often and quietly taking over edges, meadows, and even garden beds. It’s sneaky because it doesn’t look dramatic at first, and it…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: black swallow-wort, dog-strangling vine, frugal gardening, invasive plants, monarch habitat, native plants, plant identification, weed control, winter gardening tasks, yard maintenance

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Why Early Growth Doesn’t Always Lead to Strong Yields

Why Early Growth Doesn’t Always Lead to Strong Yields

Early growth often tricks gardeners into celebrating too soon. A bed of tall seedlings or fast-spreading leaves can look like a win, yet the harvest later tells a different story. Many growers notice this gap between early excitement and final production, especially in vegetables like tomatoes, peppers, and squash. Plants can shoot upward quickly when…

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8 Space-Saving Picks Ideal for Small Yards

8 Space-Saving Picks Ideal for Small Yards

Small yards don’t have to mean small dreams. With the right gardening choices, even the tightest outdoor space can explode with color, texture, and fresh homegrown harvests. Every square foot counts, and smart design turns cramped corners, fences, and patios into productive growing zones that actually feel bigger than they look. Modern gardeners across the…

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5 Pest Control Mistakes That Backfire Quickly

5 Pest Control Mistakes That Backfire Quickly

Gardens across America can turn into battlefields faster than expected when pests show up uninvited. Aphids, slugs, beetles, and caterpillars do not wait politely before they move in and start feeding. Many gardeners rush into action with sprays, traps, and homemade remedies that seem harmless but often create bigger problems. Plants weaken, beneficial insects disappear,…

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The Soil Compaction Problem That Limits Root Expansion

The Soil Compaction Problem That Limits Root Expansion

Healthy gardens across the United States depend on one simple ingredient that often gets overlooked—loose, living soil that lets roots breathe, stretch, and explore. When soil becomes compacted, it slowly transforms into a dense barrier that blocks water, air, and nutrients from reaching plant roots. That hidden pressure underground quietly weakens lawns, vegetable beds, and…

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