As the days grow shorter and temperatures begin to dip, it’s time for gardeners in Marin County to prepare for winter.
If new rules are approved, treated “produced water” could be used for agriculture, growing trees and manufacturing.
A: Consider Lacey oak. It’s native to the Hill Country, also to far Southwest Texas. It grows 20 to 25 feet tall and 15 to 20 ...
Forager and founder of Pendle Plant Craft Pete Compston gives his top tips for eating more of the nutrient-packed wild and free food ...
Cultivating your own citrus produce can be tricky to master but this quick and handy guide will help you grow your own ...
The unwanted plant releases chemical into the soil “that kills everything around it,” a Catawba Lands Conservancy official ...
The pop of red from holly berries against the glossy dark green of prickly leaves screams Christmas to us. For thrushes, ...
Gardening experts have put together a list of the best winter-flowering plants to have on display during the next few months ...
Host Amanda McNulty shares how a plant with no roots helps its host plant conserve water and energy.
Spruces do not retain their needles for long, the needles are quite sharp, and the needles are not aromatic like those of ...
Epiphytes are plants that live without having roots in the soil; they live in trees or sometimes on man-made structures like fences! The most visible epiphyte for us in South Carolina is Spanish moss, ...