How to Start Garden Seeds Indoors – Basic Technique
Starting seeds indoors is a great way to shake off the winter blues and to get a jump on the gardening season.
How to Start Garden Seeds Indoors – Basic Technique Read More »
1`
Skip to contentHow to grow vegetables like tomatoes, lettuce, peppers, potatoes, corn, carrots, onions, and more in your organic garden.
Starting seeds indoors is a great way to shake off the winter blues and to get a jump on the gardening season.
How to Start Garden Seeds Indoors – Basic Technique Read More »
If there is one plant-it-and-forget-it vegetable for your garden, it’s garlic. How to grow garlic, plant garlic, and harvest garlic.
There are few foods as nutritious, versatile, and delicious as sweet potatoes. As a bonus, sweet potatoes are really easy to grow in your garden and suffer from few pest and disease problems.
Tomato suckers are the growths that appear in the “crotch” between the leaves and the main stem. They should be pruned to encourage more fruit.
Onions are relatively easy to grow in your garden, as long as you’ve chosen the right cultivar for the day length in your area of North America.
How To Grow Onions: Which Types are Best For Your Area? Read More »
T5 grow lights are the best grow lights for starting vegetables and flowers from seed. They’re far superior to using natural light from a window.
T5 Grow Lights Help Seedlings Get A Flying Start Read More »
If you’re just starting gardening, or if you’ve been gardening a while but are short on time this year, consider this list of twelve easy-to-grow vegetables.
Shiitake mushrooms are incredibly versatile. Their earthy fragrance and meaty texture enhance a wide variety of dishes.
Shiitake Mushrooms – How I Grew Them Indoors At Home Read More »
Early Blight and Late Blight, although caused by two distinctly different fungi, have the same effect on your tomatoes or potatoes – either one may end your garden season prematurely.
Early Blight and Late Blight Control in Tomatoes and Potatoes Read More »
In Jeff Lowenfels’ 2nd book, he explores how plants take up nutrients, the processes within plant cells, and how plants form flowers, fruits, and vegetables.
Review: Teaming With Nutrients by Jeff Lowenfels Read More »