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Favorite Past Garden Columns Category

I’ll Take the Smaller One, Please

September 29th, 2020

   I’ve planted 11 trees at my new place in the last year and a half, and in every case, I bought small ones.    Small as in ones in the four- to six-foot-tall range as opposed to the bigger ones that many nurseries also offer.    I mention this because it’s a question I […]

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Gardening in the New Climate

September 22nd, 2020

   For better or worse (mostly for worse), it’s time to rethink how we garden in our new and changing climate conditions.    This summer served up a model for what climate researchers and horticulturists say we should get used to in the coming years – warmer winters, earlier springs, hotter/drier summers, increasingly erratic changes […]

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Good Tree Goes Rogue

September 16th, 2020

   This is a classic tale of a good guy turned bad… except the star is a tree instead of a movie villain.    It’s about the ornamental or “callery” pear, that hard-to-kill spring beauty that blooms white in yards, parking lots, and along streets all over Pennsylvania and beyond.    When it came to […]

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The Mystery of Morphing Plants

August 25th, 2020

   One question I get a lot is about plants that seem to be turning into something else (i.e. some other version of plant, not a lizard or monster or something).    A common one is the popular landscape evergreen dwarf Alberta spruce, that dense little pyramidal upright that flanks so many front doors.    […]

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My Lawn Strangled Itself

August 18th, 2020

   A lot of lawns went brown during the weeks-long hot, dry spell in July.    That’s normal and is a lawn’s way of “hiding out” in survival mode until conditions improve.    A good rain or two typically brings a lawn out of summer dormancy, and it goes on to green up and start […]

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What Plants Won’t Deer Eat?

August 11th, 2020

   So here’s what I’ve learned after a year and a half of trying to garden up close and personal with deer.    1.) Deer are picky. That’s right. You might’ve heard (and seen) that deer will eat just about anything when they’re hungry enough. And that’s right, too.    However, deer have definite preferences […]

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To Treat or Not to Treat?

August 4th, 2020

   We’ve reached that point in the growing season where much of our gardening time is spent dealing with “issues” that have cropped up with plants.    By now, just about all bugs and diseases have made their annual appearances, not to mention troubles related to animals, weather, and such.    Figuring out what’s gone […]

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The WOOPS Way to Predict Weather

July 28th, 2020

   Forget AccuWeather, the National Weather Service, and even the Farmer’s Almanac.    If you’re a gardener and you really want to figure out what weather’s on the way, the most accurate system is one I’ve figured out… one I call the “WOOPS model of weather forecasting.”    I’ve been using it for years, and […]

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Why It’s SO Important to Get Watering Right

July 7th, 2020

   I hope you’re staying on top of the garden-watering.    Yeah, water is expensive, and watering the plants eats up a lot of time. But the alternative in a dry, blistering July spell like this can be even more costly in terms of dead plants.    When temperatures rise into the 90s day after […]

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Can Someone Please Invent This Plant?

June 30th, 2020

   There’s usually at least one suitable plant for any planting situation.    But I have nothing to tell the guy who emailed me looking for an evergreen he can use to give dense privacy in the shade of his mature trees.    Jim said he had tried interspersing ‘Green Giant’ arborvitae (an excellent plant) […]

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