Keeping your cut flowers fresh for as long as possible is top priority, and if you're harvesting from your own garden, the time of day makes a major difference.
After the first fall frost, a couple of weeks of warm weather are common in many locations. Wait to plant your garlic until ...
Choosing cutting garden flowers in a rich palette of terracotta, burgundy, and peach – with perhaps a touch of cream – will ...
Greedy for a final flush of flowers in fall? Deadheading this list of annuals and perennials can help the plants conserve ...
As the summer blooms fade and the air turns cooler, your garden doesn’t have to lose its charm. Fall is a great time to ...
Are your Microsoft Outlook or Google Meet meetings automatically set up to record and transcribe? Then, do you add the magic ...
Not all the flowering shrubs and vines that number on gardeners' favorites lists are a good option for beginner growers. They ...
How one decades-old Milan shop makes remarkably realistic blossoms out of copper.
Even if frost has blackened the leaves of your cannas, dahlias and other summer bulbs, it's still possible to save them. DENVER — Even if frost has blackened the leaves of your cannas, dahlias and ...
Harmony Harvest Farm in Weyers Cave is featured in the November print issue spotlighting the farm's heirloom chrysanthemums.
For Contreras Farm owner Jesus Contreras, the flowers are a reminder of the man who first started planting the seeds, bringing his passion for flowers to the people of Sacramento.
Dahlias don’t hibernate neatly; they either shrivel or turn to soup when winter storage goes wrong. The line between sleep ...