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Vegetable Gardening

15 Gardening Secrets Direct from Our Readers

We love when we get great helpful comments from our readers. As you well know, you’re never a perfect gardener, so I learn a ton from reading your comments and ideas in the comments, and I love all the crafty ways you’ve come up with to deter pests, start seeds, and more. Here are a […]

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Vegetable Gardening

10 Spring Companion Planting Ideas

Oh! Spring! How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. Actually, no. I won’t scare you off with bad takes on a sonnet. I will, however, share with you how much I love planning my spring companion planting strategy.  There’s a lot to love about gardening. I enjoy digging my hands into the […]

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Vegetable Gardening

Why Do Tomatoes Split and How to Stop It

Deep in the volumes of garden lore, there are mysteries and codes, surprises and stories. Many have fascinated gardeners for years. Yet one remains mysterious: Why do tomatoes split?  Your vines are growing tall and green, the flowers bud, and little round tomatoes appear. They’re perfect tiny green spheres at first. Slowly they grow and […]

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Vegetable Gardening

The White House Vegetable Garden: 10 Fascinating Facts

In everyone’s most recent memories, Michelle Obama planted the White House vegetable garden on the South Lawn in 2009 with big applause, which was then reinforced to be made permanent by Melania Trump, and had a peaceful transfer of vegetables to Jill Biden in 2021. In fact, Jill sent Michelle a basket of veggies from […]

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Vegetable Gardening

10 New Vegetable Varieties (and Fruits!) to Look for in 2022

If you’re looking for some new vegetable varieties to try in your garden this year, have we got a list for you! And we’ll throw in a mini-biology lesson at the same time, because what’s cooler than plant biology? I’m just going to jump right in with some definitions. If you’ve ever shopped for seeds, […]

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Vegetable Gardening

The New Gardener’s Guide to Growing Your Own Food Year-Round

The idea of growing your own food year-round is appealing. I don’t mind going to the grocery store, but I also don’t know how much I’d miss it if I didn’t have to go so much. And let’s be honest, those out-of-season strawberries just aren’t the same as the juicy, sweet, transcendent berries that you grow in your own garden in late spring.

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Vegetable Gardening

How to Stop Rhizoctonia Root Rot from Ruining Your Soybean Harvest

I’ll admit that I never thought much about soybeans until recently. I certainly hadn’t given much thought to Rhizoctonia root rot. While the disease can impact other plants, it’s somewhat common among soybeans.  Soybeans are one of the largest commercial crops in the U.S., with farms growing between 76 and 90 million acres yearly. In […]

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Vegetable Gardening

A Winter Planting Guide: How to Grow and Store the Food That Will Carry You Through the Cold Months

As someone who loves to cook and does it a bit for a living, I always need fresh ingredients, especially herbs. As much as I love going to the garden in the summer and fall to pick vegetables for dinner, I also love sorting through my stored vegetables in the depths of winter. Planting for a late season harvest means I can enjoy a butternut squash soup anytime I want. And for a tray of roasted root vegetables, all I have to do is grab some beets, carrots, rutabaga, and parsnips from my basement.

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Vegetable Gardening

How to Grow Your Own Pizza Garden for the Best Pizza Parties

According to the Disney/Pixar movie called WALL-E, you can grow your own pizza garden. If you haven’t seen the movie, it’s really adorable and fun. The film centers on the adventures of a small waste-collecting robot stranded on earth hundreds of years after humanity has covered the planet in garbage and left to live on a massive spaceship. I won’t go into details that might give away the plot, but the humans are so far removed from nature that when they eventually return to earth, they believe they can plant a literal pizza, and it will grow. 

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Vegetable Gardening

How to Garden in the Winter

I try my best to love all the seasons. They each have their unique joys: there’s nothing quite like the quiet of a snowstorm or the brilliant colors of the trees during fall in New England. But somewhere around the time when the thermometer starts dipping lower each day, I start thinking about how to […]