Prevention is the key to plant-disease control. This is true whether a disease is infectious (involving host-parasite relationships between plants and pathogens such as certain fungi, bacteria, or viruses) or non-infectious (involving disorders such as nutrient deficiencies or winter damage). Read Nine Keys to Plant Disease Prevention
Plants & Gardens Blog
-
Sustainable Gardening
Nine Keys to Plant Disease Prevention
-
Sustainable Gardening
Least-Toxic Controls of Plant Diseases
The best way to control plant diseases is to make sure they don't get a foothold in the garden in the first place. However, if they are already established, you may feel it's necessary to resort to one of the controls described below. Read Least-Toxic Controls of Plant Diseases
-
Garden DesignPollinators and Birds
Flora for Fauna
Transforming a garden into a wildlife refuge doesn't require a big cash prize; you can do the work gradually. Start by expanding your existing borders with flowers that butterflies, hummingbirds, bees, and other pollinators love. Read Flora for Fauna
-
Pollinators and BirdsPlant Choices
Zinnias—If You Plant Them, Butterflies Will Come
These cheerful annuals are enjoying renewed popularity as more and more colorful, compact, and disease-resistant varieties appear on seed racks. Read Zinnias—If You Plant Them, Butterflies Will Come
-
Pollinators and BirdsNative Flora
Milkweeds—Easing the Plight of the Monarch Butterfly
Modern agriculture has made much of the U.S. farm belt inhospitable to Monarchs. In the East, industrial, commercial, and residential land use is gradually effacing the habitat that supports them. This is where gardeners come in. We can make a big difference by growing the plants that are most important to the lifecycle of the Monarchs—milkweeds.
Read Milkweeds—Easing the Plight of the Monarch Butterfly -
Pollinators and BirdsNative Flora
Bumble Bees—The Essential, Indefatigable Pollinators
We live on a planet pollinated primarily by bees. Bees fertilize most of our favorite flowers, and pollinate a third of the plants we eat. They are also the exclusive pollinator of several rare and imperiled wildflowers, including native monkshoods and lady's tresses orchids. Without these essential insects, farm productivity would plummet and wildflowers would become extinct. In short, bumble bees and other bees are essential for our own well being and the survival of a good deal of the world's biodiversity. Read Bumble Bees—The Essential, Indefatigable Pollinators
-
Native FloraPlant Choices
Wildflower Fever!—A Selection of Unusual Natives
Nowadays, I fill my garden with beautiful wildflowers. Besides increasing biodiversity in and of themselves by augmenting the shrinking populations and gene pools of native species, they provide a valuable source of food for insects and birds. Read Wildflower Fever!—A Selection of Unusual Natives
-
Growing FoodPlant Choices
Growing Chile Peppers
You can grow chile peppers just about anywhere in the United States and southern Canada, as long as you prepare your soil, nurture your seedlings properly, and provide the plants with their basic needs. Read Growing Chile Peppers
-
Growing Food
Preserving Chiles
In midsummer, chile peppers mature, begin to ripen, and become more pungent. Some are fiery hot, while others are crisp, slightly sweet with just a hint of heat, and full of flavor. This is the time to put up that prize-winning corn relish, those pickled peppers, salsas of every kind, and hot pepper chutney. Read Preserving Chiles
-
HouseplantsPlant Choices
Aspidistra—An Alluring and Enduring Favorite
Aspidistra can endure temperatures as low as 23 degrees Fahrenheit and as high as 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Aspidistra can survive extreme levels of urban pollution and dust, as well as light levels as low as 25 footcandles. Finally, as if attuned to the contingencies of modern living, they are forgiving of our inauspicious watering habits. Read Aspidistra—An Alluring and Enduring Favorite