Grow a fruitful tomato garden with this complete guide to sunlight, soil, watering, support systems, and more.
July is historically our hottest and driest month. Keep things easy, on both you and the garden. Work in the mornings, stay ...
July is when inland gardens really heat up, while coastal gardeners wake up to cool, gray mornings until month’s end. After ...
Your tomato flowers are drying up and falling in the heat. Misting and hard pruning won't save them — 30–40% shade cloth plus steady deep watering and mulch is the only combo with trial-backed yield ...
1. Sow turnips now for quick late-summer roots. Choose a sunny, open patch with fine, moist soil, and sow thinly in shallow ...
From the moment you plant your tomatoes, you begin looking forward to those tasty harvests, but there are a number of reasons ...
Learn how to prep for a fall tomato crop, from clearing old plants and pests to enriching beds and choosing Texas-friendly varieties.
Whether you have a sunny balcony, terrace or patio, these fruit plants are well suited to container gardening and can reward you with fresh harvests at home ...
Welcome to July, one of the busiest months As temperatures rise and plants flourish, regular care is essential to keep them ...
USU plants, soils, and climate Master's candidate Abbey Lazier shares her research on dwarf and micro-dwarf tomato crops.
Start these plants in July for a delicious fall harvest For most parts of the U.S., July is the ideal time to sow seeds and plant more starts. If you plant smart, you can look forward to a ...
A tomato plant left to its own devices can easily reach 6 feet tall or more by midsummer. For most home gardeners, that's a problem. Whether you're working with a small raised bed, a balcony container ...