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Jazz Up Your Gardens With Contrasting Textures and Colored Foliage

If you can’t please yourself in your own garden, where can you? Why put up with plants that just sit there without speaking to each other - or to you? If a home landscape conveys all the charm and originality of a heavily mulched McDonald’s parking lot (minus cigarette butts), it’s time to fill in with more plants, more color and more contrast to make it more personal and exciting.

By |2020-07-01T15:51:08-04:00June 20th, 2019|Categories: Clues, Garden Coaching|Comments Off on Jazz Up Your Gardens With Contrasting Textures and Colored Foliage

May Blooms for Bees

Because we have diverse bee species (long-tongue and short-tongue bees, big ones and small ones, specialists and generalists) with different needs and life cycles, we need diverse kinds of plants - with different sizes, shapes, bloom times, scents, markings, reproductive structures. Read about what's blooming in May and special plants for specialist bees...

By |2020-07-01T15:51:08-04:00May 10th, 2019|Categories: Clues|Comments Off on May Blooms for Bees

Perennials That Look Good in Winter

How do we make gardens that still look like gardens in the winter? It’s worth scoping out what perennial foliage still looks good in your garden in cold weather. Gather these "foul weather friends" together for winter garden beauty.

By |2020-07-01T15:51:09-04:00February 3rd, 2019|Categories: Clues, Great Plants, How-To's|Comments Off on Perennials That Look Good in Winter

Spot Invasive Plants

Spotting Invasive plants when leaves are green can be tricky. But invasives with a longer growing season than native plants are easy to see in fall. Their leaves remain green or display bright autumn color long after natives have lost their leaves for the winter.

By |2020-07-01T15:51:09-04:00October 17th, 2018|Categories: Clues, How-To's|Comments Off on Spot Invasive Plants

Signs that Summer’s Winding Down

I’m hearing lots of clues that summer is winding down, though. Dawn gets quieter and quieter, but the side yard is alive with twittering goldfinches clinging to Anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculum) plants, gorging on ripe seeds, while bumblebees keep up the buzz pollinating its long-lasting lavender flowers.

By |2020-07-01T15:51:09-04:00September 20th, 2018|Categories: Clues|Comments Off on Signs that Summer’s Winding Down