- The National Gardening Association
The Green Pages is where members give recommendations of their favorite local garden centers, public gardens, online sellers of gardening stuff, gardening books, and more Our annual photo contest draws thousands of entries, and the members are the judges!
- A Primer for Getting Started - Garden. org
The garden org website contains a vast collection of resources to help gardeners of every sort Explore our learning library for articles about plant care, weeds, pests, Q A, dictionaries, and more Our detailed plants database is the largest in the world
- The Garden. org Plants Database - The National Gardening Association
The Garden org Plants Database There are 799,277 plants, and 889,256 images in this world class database of plants, which is collaboratively developed by over 5,000 Garden org members from around the globe
- When to Plant Vegetables: The Garden Planting Calendar
Enter your location below and experience the magic of our garden calendar planting guide You can enter a zipcode, a landmark, "City, Country" or "City, State"
- What is a Garden? - Garden. org - The National Gardening Association
Add in the time I spend talking with other people in their gardens and the learning increases Bring children out into the garden along with one of the numerous gardening curricula available, and it becomes a place to learn botany, math, entomology, ecology, chemistry, nutrition science and much more A garden is an experimental laboratory
- Plant Care Guides - Garden. org - The National Gardening Association
We've chosen the most popular plants and provided the essential information you need for choosing, planting, and maintaining them
- When to Plant Vegetables in Buffalo, New York - Garden. org
Cole crops like broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage can be direct seeded into your garden around March 13, assuming the ground can be worked, but it's better to start them indoors around February 14 and then transplant them into the garden around April 4
- Gardening Calculators: Sulfur - Garden. org
Add a few drops of vinegar to a tablespoon of dry garden soil If it fizzes, your soil's pH is greater than 7 5 Add a pinch of baking soda to a tablespoon of moist soil If it fizzes, your soil's pH is less than 5 0 Do you have sand, loam, or clay soil? All soils are mostly collections of tiny mineral particles
|