Friday, July 3, 2026

The Dog Days of Summer

Dog under a front porch AI-generated

 Somewhere between the first ripe tomato and the first catalog for fall bulbs, every gardener reaches a certain point. The weeds are still growing. The tomatoes still need picking. The lawn still insists on being mowed. But the gardener? The gardener has begun looking enviously at the dog stretched out beneath the porch.

If you've ever found yourself wondering whether lying in the shade until September is a reasonable gardening strategy, you've officially entered the dog days of summer.

The expression "dog days" comes from the ancient world. The Greeks and Romans noticed that Sirius, the Dog Star, rose with the sun during the hottest weeks of the year. They believed its appearance added to the blazing heat, bringing long, oppressive afternoons that seemed to drain the energy from man and beast alike. Whether Sirius had anything to do with the temperature is another matter, but the name has endured for more than two thousand years.

Gardeners understand the phrase better than anyone.

By late July and early August, the garden has taken on a life of its own. Annual flowers bloom almost in spite of us. Perennials settle into their summer rhythm. Okra seems to grow overnight, while zucchini quietly becomes baseball-bat sized if you miss a single morning. Crepe myrtles are putting on their annual show, hummingbirds dart among the flowers, and cicadas provide an orchestra that no one requested but everyone receives.

Meanwhile, the gardener discovers that simply walking to the mailbox requires the determination once reserved for mountain expeditions.

This is the season for changing your pace rather than fighting the weather.

Work early in the morning while the grass is still damp with dew. Water deeply instead of frequently. Keep mulch thick enough to shade the soil and slow evaporation. Deadhead flowers, harvest vegetables regularly, and postpone major planting projects until cooler weather arrives. The garden isn't asking for heroics; it's asking for consistency.

Most importantly, give yourself permission to enjoy the garden instead of constantly working in it.

Sit on the porch with a glass of iced tea. Watch butterflies drift across the flower beds. Listen to the bees working the blossoms. Read that gardening book you've been meaning to open since spring. A garden isn't merely something to maintain. It's something to experience.

Even the dog knows this.

Notice how he isn't worrying about weeds. He's not wondering whether the hydrangeas need another dose of fertilizer. He's not calculating how many bags of mulch are left to spread. He's found the coolest patch of shade beneath the porch, stretched out with his tongue hanging three inches too long, and declared that all serious business can wait until evening.

There is wisdom in that.

By sunset, the shadows lengthen, the air softens just a little, and both gardener and dog begin to stir again. The evening becomes the perfect time to pick tomatoes, pull a handful of weeds, or simply admire the day's accomplishments.

Summer has a way of reminding us that gardens are living things with seasons of labor and seasons of rest. The dog days aren't a sign that gardening has stopped. They're simply nature's invitation to slow down, work wisely, and appreciate the beauty that thrives even in the hottest days of the year.

So if your family happens to catch you sitting motionless in the shade, sipping iced tea and watching the garden from a comfortable chair, just tell them you're following the example of an experienced old farm dog.

After all, he seems to know exactly how to survive the dog days of summer.

Return to GoGardenNow.com. Where Great Gardens Begin! 

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Five Garden Upgrades You'll Enjoy Every Day

Garden Bench Image by tvictory from Pixabay

Some garden purchases bring a brief burst of excitement. A new annual blooms brilliantly for a few weeks. A novelty ornament catches the eye for a season. But the very best improvements are the ones that quietly enrich your life every single day.

These are the upgrades that make you linger a little longer outdoors with your morning coffee, encourage evening walks through the garden, and make ordinary chores easier and more enjoyable. They become part of your daily routine, almost without your noticing.

Here are five garden improvements that continue to reward you year after year.

1. Create a Comfortable Place to Sit

Every beautiful garden deserves an audience, and that audience is often just you.

Whether it's a simple wooden bench beneath a shade tree, a pair of Adirondack chairs overlooking the flower beds, or a comfortable porch furnished with weather-resistant seating, a dedicated place to sit changes the way you experience your landscape.

Instead of always working in the garden, you'll begin spending time in it.

Morning coffee tastes better among birdsong. Evening conversations become more memorable beneath soft garden lighting. Even a ten-minute break after watering can become one of the most peaceful moments of the day.

Choose seating that's sturdy, comfortable, and positioned where you'll naturally want to pause.


2. Install Automatic Irrigation

Watering Image by Peggychoucair from Pixabay
Watering by hand has its place, especially for containers and newly planted specimens. But few improvements provide as much daily convenience as an automatic irrigation system.

Drip irrigation, soaker hoses, or programmable sprinklers deliver water consistently while saving both time and effort. Plants receive moisture exactly when they need it, even while you're traveling or simply busy with other responsibilities.

Consistent watering also reduces plant stress, helps vegetables produce more reliably, and often lowers overall water consumption by placing moisture exactly where it's needed.

Instead of dragging hoses across the yard every evening, you can spend your time enjoying the garden instead.

3. Add Garden Lighting

Most gardens disappear after sunset. A thoughtfully lit garden comes alive.


Low-voltage or solar pathway lights improve safety while extending the hours you can enjoy your outdoor spaces. Soft uplighting beneath ornamental trees, gentle illumination around patios, and subtle accent lighting near water features transform familiar views into something magical. 

Garden lighting AI generated

Garden lighting doesn't have to be dramatic.

Sometimes the most inviting effect comes from a few warm pools of light guiding you down a winding path or highlighting the graceful form of a Japanese maple or flowering shrub.

A garden shouldn't only be beautiful between breakfast and supper.

4. Grow Plants That Reward You Every Season

Instead of filling every corner with short-lived annuals, invest in plants that provide lasting beauty.

Evergreens give structure through winter. Flowering shrubs provide dependable blooms each year. Ornamental grasses sway in the breeze long after many flowers have faded. Shade trees cool the landscape while becoming more beautiful with every passing season.

Add fragrant plants near doors and walkways so you enjoy their perfume every time you pass. Include herbs near the kitchen for convenient harvesting. Plant flowering perennials that return faithfully with very little maintenance.

A thoughtfully chosen plant palette keeps your garden interesting from January through December.

5. Organize Your Garden Tools

Potting shed and bench AI generated

Few things interrupt a pleasant afternoon faster than searching for missing pruners.

A simple tool station, potting bench, or small garden shed keeps everything exactly where you need it. Store frequently used tools within easy reach. Keep gloves, fertilizers, labels, twine, and watering equipment organized in clearly designated places.

An orderly workspace makes every gardening task quicker, safer, and more enjoyable.

As an added benefit, properly stored tools stay cleaner, last longer, and are ready whenever inspiration strikes.

The Best Investment Isn't Always the Most Expensive

The most satisfying gardens aren't necessarily the largest or the most elaborate.

They're the ones designed to make everyday life more pleasant.

A comfortable chair beneath a tree. A watering system that quietly handles routine chores. Soft evening lighting. Reliable plants that improve with age. A tidy place for every tool.

These improvements don't simply increase your property's value—they increase your enjoyment of it.

Long after the newest plant variety has come and gone, these simple upgrades continue to pay dividends every single day.

A well-designed garden isn't merely a place to grow plants. It's a place to live well.

Return to GoGardenNow.com. Where Great Gardens Begin.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Crassula: The Remarkable Succulents That Turn Sunlight Into Living Sculpture

 Crassula Image by Claire GIRAL from Pixabay

Some plants quietly occupy a windowsill. Others demand attention the moment you see them. Crassulas belong to the latter. Their leaves stack like tiny pagodas, spiral into geometric perfection, blush crimson beneath the sun, or swell into improbable shapes that seem more like works of modern sculpture than living plants. They have an uncanny ability to look both ancient and futuristic, as though they have survived countless ages while somehow belonging to tomorrow's garden.

Look closer and the fascination only deepens. A single collection of Crassulas can contain miniature shrubs, creeping groundcovers, upright columns, bizarre cultivars with rippled or tubular leaves, and elegant specimens that bloom with clouds of delicate white or pink flowers. They ask for very little in return—sunlight, restraint with water, and a bit of patience—yet reward even beginning gardeners with years of dependable beauty. It is little wonder that Crassulas have become favorites among houseplant enthusiasts, succulent collectors, and gardeners alike.

What Is a Crassula?

Crassula is a large genus of succulent plants belonging to the stonecrop family, Crassulaceae. The genus contains well over 150 recognized species, along with hundreds of cultivars and hybrids developed by growers around the world.

The name Crassula comes from the Latin word crassus, meaning "thick" or "fat"—an appropriate description of the fleshy leaves that store water during dry periods. Their remarkable ability to endure drought has made them among the most adaptable succulents grown today.

Where Are Crassulas Native?

Most Crassulas originate in southern Africa, particularly South Africa and neighboring Namibia. This region is famous for its extraordinary diversity of succulent plants. Rainfall is often scarce and unpredictable, temperatures can fluctuate dramatically, and soils are typically rocky and well-drained.

Over countless generations, Crassulas evolved ingenious ways to survive these challenging conditions. Their thick leaves function as living reservoirs, storing moisture until the next rainfall arrives. Many species also produce a powdery coating or colorful pigments that protect them from intense sunlight and reduce water loss.

Although southern Africa remains their center of diversity, a smaller number of species naturally occur in Madagascar, tropical Africa, and parts of the Arabian Peninsula.

Crassula Image by meineresterampe from Pixabay

 Popular Crassula Species

One of the joys of collecting Crassulas is discovering just how diverse the genus can be.

Crassula ovata (Jade Plant)

The Jade Plant is undoubtedly the best-known member of the genus. Often called the "money plant" or "friendship tree," it develops into a handsome miniature shrub with thick trunks and glossy green leaves that often develop red edges in bright sunlight.

Jade plants can live for decades and may eventually resemble miniature bonsai trees. Mature specimens often produce clusters of star-shaped white or pale pink flowers during winter.

Popular cultivars include:

  • 'Gollum'
  • 'Hobbit'
  • 'Lemon and Lime'
  • 'Tricolor'
  • 'Ogre's Ears'

Crassula perforata (String of Buttons)

This delightful species grows upright stems with triangular leaves stacked one atop another like tiny buttons threaded on a string. Bright light often brings out attractive pink or red leaf margins.

Its architectural appearance makes it especially attractive in mixed succulent planters.

Crassula muscosa (Watch Chain)

Unlike most Crassulas, this species forms densely packed stems covered with minute overlapping leaves, giving the appearance of braided rope or intricate chains.

It creates fascinating texture and works beautifully spilling over containers.

Crassula capitella 'Campfire'

Among the most colorful Crassulas, 'Campfire' begins the season green before gradually transforming into brilliant shades of orange, scarlet, and crimson when grown in strong sunlight.

Its glowing foliage gives the impression of embers burning in a campfire.

Crassula rupestris 'Baby's Necklace'

This charming cultivar forms stacked bead-like leaves along trailing stems. The rounded foliage often develops vivid pink edges under bright conditions, making it one of the most attractive hanging Crassulas.

Crassula pyramidalis

This unusual species appears almost man-made. Tiny leaves overlap so precisely that they create perfect square columns resembling carved stone towers or miniature pyramids.

Collectors prize it for its remarkable geometry.

Growing Crassulas Successfully

One reason Crassulas remain so popular is that they are among the easiest succulents to grow.

Light

Most Crassulas thrive in bright light and appreciate several hours of direct morning or late afternoon sunshine. Indoors, a south- or west-facing window is usually ideal.

Too little light causes weak, stretched growth and dull coloration. Plenty of sunlight encourages compact plants and vibrant reds, oranges, and pinks.

Soil

Excellent drainage is essential.

A commercial cactus or succulent mix works well, or you can improve drainage by adding coarse sand, pumice, or perlite.

Never allow Crassulas to remain in heavy, soggy soil.

Water

The greatest mistake beginners make is watering too frequently.

Allow the soil to dry thoroughly before watering again. Then water deeply until excess moisture drains from the pot.

During winter, when many species slow their growth, watering should become much less frequent.

Temperature

Most Crassulas prefer temperatures between 60°F and 80°F.

While some species tolerate light frosts, many should be protected whenever temperatures approach freezing.

Fertilizer

A light application of diluted succulent fertilizer during spring and summer is usually sufficient.

Too much fertilizer often produces weak growth and reduces the compact habit that makes these plants so attractive.

Propagation

Crassulas are remarkably easy to propagate.

Many species root readily from:

  • Stem cuttings
  • Individual leaves
  • Offsets produced around the base

Allow cut surfaces to dry for a day or two before placing them into dry succulent soil. Roots typically begin forming within a few weeks.

This ease of propagation explains why many collectors quickly find themselves with far more Crassulas than they originally intended.

Common Problems

Healthy Crassulas experience relatively few issues.

Potential problems include:

  • Root rot from excessive watering
  • Mealybugs hiding in leaf joints
  • Aphids on flower stalks
  • Leggy growth caused by insufficient light
  • Sunburn if suddenly moved from shade into intense afternoon sun

Most problems can be avoided by providing bright light, excellent drainage, and careful watering.

Why Gardeners Love Crassulas

Few plant groups offer such extraordinary variety while remaining so easy to grow. Some Crassulas resemble tiny trees. Others form colorful carpets, elegant towers, cascading necklaces, or abstract sculptures. Many change color with the seasons, rewarding attentive gardeners with ever-changing displays.

Whether you're furnishing a sunny windowsill, designing a drought-tolerant patio container, or assembling a collection of unusual succulents, Crassulas offer endless possibilities. They remind us that beauty need not be extravagant. Sometimes it is found in thick little leaves that patiently gather sunlight, endure hardship with quiet resilience, and transform the simplest pot into something worth stopping to admire.

Return to GoGardenNow.com.

A Gardener's Summer Reading List

Summer is an odd season for gardeners. By July, the exuberance of spring planting has yielded to the steady rhythm of watering, weeding, deadheading, harvesting, and waiting. The heat encourages us to work early, rest through the afternoon, and return to the garden in the cool of evening. Those quiet hours indoors offer the perfect opportunity to replenish the mind while the garden replenishes itself.

The finest gardening books do more than teach techniques. They shape the way we see the landscape. They remind us that every garden belongs to a tradition stretching back centuries. Here are some volumes worthy of a place beside your favorite chair this summer.

 

For the Lover of Gardening History

Clavis Calendaria by John Brady

Though not strictly a gardening manual, this remarkable early nineteenth-century work deserves a place on every serious gardener's shelf. Its title means "Key to the Calendar," and Brady explores the rhythm of the year through church festivals, saints' days, historical events, customs, and seasonal observances. It reminds us that gardeners once measured time not merely by frost dates but by Michaelmas, Candlemas, Lammas, and countless other milestones woven into everyday life. For anyone interested in the older agricultural calendar, it offers a fascinating glimpse into how our ancestors understood the passing seasons.

The American Gardener's Calendar

Published in 1806 by Bernard McMahon, this American classic was adapted specifically to the climates of the young United States. Thomas Jefferson admired McMahon greatly, and the book remained influential for decades. Reading it today reveals both how much—and how little—gardening has changed over two centuries.


The Great English Garden Writers

Gertrude Jekyll

No gardener's education is complete without Gertrude Jekyll. Her books, including Colour in the Flower Garden and Wood and Garden, teach far more than plant selection. She understood harmony, proportion, texture, and the way a garden matures through time. Even modern landscapes can benefit from her timeless principles.

Rosemary Verey

Rosemary Verey bridged the classical English tradition with contemporary gardening. Books such as The Garden in Winter and The Making of a Garden remind us that a beautiful garden should offer interest every month of the year—not merely during spring's brief display.

Christopher Lloyd

Irreverent, opinionated, and wonderfully entertaining, Christopher Lloyd challenges conventional wisdom without abandoning good horticulture. His books reward careful reading and encourage gardeners to experiment rather than simply imitate.


Practical Wisdom from Experienced Gardeners

Ruth Stout

If you've ever dreamed of gardening with less work, Ruth Stout may become your favorite author. Her classic How to Have a Green Thumb Without an Aching Back popularized deep organic mulching long before "no-dig gardening" became fashionable. Her cheerful common sense makes her books feel like conversations with a wise grandmother.

Lee Reich

Reich's Weedless Gardening offers modern, research-based approaches that complement many of Ruth Stout's ideas while adapting them to today's gardens.

Charles Dowding

Charles Dowding has become one of the world's leading advocates of no-dig vegetable gardening. His books explain how healthy soil, generous compost, and minimal disturbance produce remarkably productive gardens with less labor.


Garden Inspiration Rather Than Instruction

Bunny Williams

Her beautifully photographed books reveal gardens that feel comfortably lived in rather than merely decorated. They inspire readers to think of gardens as extensions of the home.

Monty Don

Monty Don writes with warmth and quiet reflection. The Complete Gardener and his seasonal journals are filled with practical advice, but even more importantly they cultivate patience—a virtue every gardener eventually learns.


Books for Plant Lovers

William Cullina

Cullina's books on native plants combine scientific accuracy with readable prose. If you're interested in expanding the ecological value of your landscape, his works are an excellent starting point.

Noel Kingsbury

Kingsbury explores naturalistic planting, grasses, and sustainable landscapes without sacrificing beauty. His books often challenge gardeners to think beyond traditional borders.


Garden Memoirs Worth Savoring

Some of the finest gardening books are really memoirs.

  • The Well-Tempered Garden
  • A Year at North Hill
  • The Education of a Gardener
  • Green Thoughts

These books remind us that gardening is ultimately about people as much as plants.


Botanical Gardens to Visit After You've Finished Reading

A good gardening book naturally leads to the desire to see great gardens in person. Consider planning a visit to:

  • Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew — perhaps the world's greatest botanical collection.
  • Great Dixter House and Gardens — Christopher Lloyd's celebrated garden.
  • Sissinghurst Castle Garden — one of the finest examples of garden rooms.
  • Longwood Gardens — spectacular in every season.
  • Missouri Botanical Garden — among America's oldest and most respected botanical institutions.
  • Coastal Georgia Botanical Gardens — an excellent destination for Southern gardeners.
  • Atlanta Botanical Garden — renowned for tropical collections and imaginative seasonal displays.

A Final Thought

Every experienced gardener eventually discovers that there are two kinds of growth taking place. One happens in the soil. The other happens quietly in the mind.

The vegetables ripen. The roses bloom. Trees put on another ring of wood. But books cultivate something just as valuable: judgment. They teach us to recognize beauty, to avoid repeating old mistakes, and to appreciate that every generation inherits a garden from those who came before.

This summer, spend a few afternoons beneath a porch fan or in the shade of an old oak with one of these books close at hand. The garden will still be waiting when you return, and you may find yourself seeing it with wiser eyes than when you laid the book aside.

Return to GoGardenNow.com

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Here’s a gardener’s to-do list for July 2026, for each region of the United States.

Red rose

Here’s a gardener’s to-do list for July, 2026, tailored for each region of the United States. July is the blazing heart of summer—when gardens are lush, demanding, and full of reward. It’s a time to harvest, hydrate, and stay a step ahead of heat, pests, and weeds.


Northeast

  • 🍅 Harvest Daily: Tomatoes, cucumbers, beans, and squash come fast—pick often to keep them producing.

  • 💧 Water Deep and Early: Aim for morning watering, soaking 1–2 inches per week.

  • 🥬 Sow Fall Crops: Start broccoli, kale, cabbage, and carrots for autumn harvest.

  • 🌿 Weed Relentlessly: Weeds explode in summer heat—pull before they seed.

  • 🌻 Deadhead Flowers: Promote blooms on annuals like cosmos, zinnias, and rudbeckia.


Midwest

  • 🥦 Start Fall Veggies: Sow cool crops like carrots, beets, lettuce, and broccoli mid-month.

  • 🐛 Control Pests: Japanese beetles, squash bugs, and aphids peak now—check daily.

  • 💦 Mulch Again: Replenish mulch to conserve water and cool soil.

  • 🌽 Check Corn & Beans: Stake, feed, and harvest steadily.

  • 🌸 Cut Back Leggy Annuals: Shear tired blooms to encourage new growth.


Southeast

  • 🍉 Water Generously: Long, deep soakings are vital during sweltering spells.

  • 🥬 Sow Heat-Tolerant Greens: Malabar spinach, okra, southern peas, and amaranth thrive now.

  • 🐞 Monitor for Disease: Powdery mildew and blight thrive in heat and humidity—prune for airflow.

  • 🌴 Prune Spent Shrubs: Trim crape myrtles and gardenias after flowering.

  • 🌾 Plan Fall Garden: Order seeds and prep beds for August planting.


Southwest

  • 💧 Irrigate Smartly: Deep, infrequent watering keeps roots strong—use drip systems or soaker hoses.

  • 🌞 Shade Tender Crops: Lettuce, peppers, and young seedlings benefit from partial shade.

  • 🧄 Harvest Garlic & Onions: Cure in a dry, shaded place with good airflow.

  • 🐛 Check for Spider Mites: Especially in dry climates—look for stippling on leaves.

  • 🌼 Trim Back Heat-Stressed Flowers: Cut back for a late-summer bloom surge.


Pacific Northwest

  • 🥕 Sow Fall Veggies: Start spinach, carrots, kale, and broccoli now.

  • 🌧️ Water When Needed: July can be dry—don’t let veggies wilt.

  • 🌻 Pinch and Deadhead: Keep annuals blooming with regular trimming.

  • 🍅 Stake and Feed Tomatoes: Provide support and side-dress with compost.

  • 🧤 Harvest Herbs: Snip mint, oregano, thyme, and basil before they flower.


Mountain West

  • 🥦 Plant Cool Crops for Fall: Kale, cabbage, carrots, and spinach can go in early or mid-month.

  • 💨 Protect from Wind and Heat: Stake tall plants and use mulch to retain moisture.

  • 🐜 Pest Watch: Aphids and grasshoppers are common—monitor and act fast.

  • 🧄 Harvest Garlic: When lower leaves yellow and the stalk softens, it’s ready.

  • 🌸 Trim Back Annuals: Shear tired blooms to stimulate reblooming.


California

  • 🍅 Harvest Early and Often: Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, and squash are rolling in.

  • 🌿 Plant for Fall: Start brassicas, chard, and late corn indoors or in cool areas.

  • 🌞 Mulch and Shade: Protect soil from scorching and young plants from sunburn.

  • 🧴 Irrigation Check: Inspect drip lines, and adjust watering as needed.

  • 🌺 Prune Spent Blooms: Roses and salvias benefit from a midsummer trim.


July is the proving ground of the gardener. It’s hot, it’s fast-paced, and it’s generous—if you keep up. Tend carefully, harvest joyfully, and always, always water before the sun climbs too high.

Return to GoGardenNow.com.

Monday, June 29, 2026

How Colonial Americans Gardened During Summer

 Colonial gardener

What 18th-Century Gardeners Can Teach Us About Growing Food in the Hottest Months

Long before air conditioning, drip irrigation, garden centers, or battery-powered tools, colonial American families managed to grow enough food to feed themselves through scorching summers. Their gardens were not hobbies—they were necessities. A failed garden could mean an empty table the following winter.

While modern gardeners enjoy many conveniences, there's surprising wisdom to be found in the practices of those early American homesteaders. Many of their methods remain just as effective today.

The Garden Was the Family Grocery Store

Most colonial households maintained a kitchen garden close to the house. Every available space was put to work producing vegetables, herbs, medicinal plants, and flowers useful for cooking, preserving, or attracting beneficial insects.

Summer gardens commonly included:

  • Beans
  • Corn
  • Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Cabbage
  • Turnips
  • Carrots
  • Onions
  • Herbs such as sage, thyme, parsley, dill, and mint

Fruit orchards often surrounded the home with apples, peaches, pears, cherries, and plums providing fresh fruit as well as supplies for drying, preserving, and cider making.

They Rose Early—and Quit Before the Heat

Colonial Americans understood something many modern gardeners eventually rediscover: summer afternoons belong in the shade.

Most heavy gardening work was completed shortly after sunrise while temperatures remained comfortable. By midday, people turned their attention indoors to cooking, preserving, mending tools, spinning, or other household tasks.

As evening cooled, they often returned to the garden for another hour or two of weeding or harvesting.

Modern gardeners can benefit from adopting this same schedule. Your plants—and your back—will thank you.

Weeds Were a Constant Battle

Without herbicides, weeds were removed almost entirely by hand.

The hoe was perhaps the most important gardening tool in colonial America. Gardeners used it nearly every day to loosen soil, cut young weeds before they matured, and conserve moisture by breaking the soil surface after rains.

Many gardeners believed a loose, finely cultivated surface reduced evaporation. Although today's mulches often accomplish this more effectively, regular shallow cultivation was an important practice before straw mulch became widely available.

Manure Was Garden Gold

Commercial fertilizer did not exist.

Instead, gardeners relied on whatever organic materials they could gather:

  • Stable manure
  • Cow manure
  • Poultry manure
  • Wood ashes
  • Compost
  • Decayed leaves
  • Kitchen scraps

Nothing useful was wasted. Livestock and gardens worked together in a continuous cycle that naturally returned nutrients to the soil.

Rain Was Precious

Watering by hose was, of course, impossible.

Gardeners depended largely upon rainfall. During dry periods, water might be carried by bucket from wells, springs, ponds, or rain barrels—but because this required tremendous labor, it was used sparingly.

Instead of frequent watering, colonial gardeners concentrated on conserving the moisture already present in the soil.

Deep cultivation before planting, close crop spacing, and continual weed removal all helped reduce moisture loss.

Companion Planting Was Practical

Many colonial gardeners mixed crops together rather than planting long, single rows.

Corn often supported climbing beans while squash spread beneath them, shading the soil and suppressing weeds. This Native American planting method, now known as the "Three Sisters," became common throughout many colonial settlements.

Strong-smelling herbs such as sage, tansy, thyme, and mint were also planted near vegetables, partly for culinary use and partly because they were believed to discourage insects.

Saving Seed Was Expected

Every successful gardener became a seed saver.

Throughout summer, certain plants were left to mature completely so seed could be collected for the following year's crop.

Families carefully selected seed from their healthiest, most productive plants, gradually adapting vegetables to local growing conditions over generations.

Today's heirloom varieties owe much of their history to this careful annual practice.

Nothing Went to Waste

Summer harvests were immediately put to use.

Vegetables were eaten fresh, but surplus produce was preserved through:

  • Drying
  • Pickling
  • Fermenting
  • Salting
  • Root cellaring
  • Making jams and preserves

Beans, peas, herbs, apples, peaches, and peppers commonly hung from rafters or lay drying on screens during the hottest weeks of summer.

Colonial families always had one eye on the coming winter.

Livestock Helped Manage the Garden

Many families allowed chickens to forage in garden areas after harvest.

The birds eagerly scratched for insects, weed seeds, and plant debris while adding valuable manure to the soil. Larger animals remained fenced away from growing crops but supplied the manure that kept gardens productive year after year.

Their Gardens Changed with the Seasons

Unlike many modern gardens that peak in spring and fade in midsummer, colonial gardeners constantly replanted.

As one crop finished, another replaced it.

Peas gave way to beans.

Lettuce made room for turnips.

Early potatoes were followed by cabbage.

By late summer, many families were already sowing vegetables for autumn harvests.

The garden never truly stood still.

Lessons Worth Remembering

Colonial gardeners possessed little technology but tremendous practical knowledge. They observed weather carefully, conserved every resource, improved their soil continuously, and planned months ahead.

Modern irrigation systems, mulches, improved tools, and disease-resistant varieties certainly make gardening easier today. Yet the principles remain remarkably familiar:

  • Build healthy soil.
  • Remove weeds early.
  • Water wisely.
  • Harvest regularly.
  • Replant throughout the season.
  • Waste nothing.

Perhaps the greatest lesson is this: a productive garden isn't built through expensive equipment or complicated techniques. It grows from steady attention, patient observation, and daily care.

The colonial gardener knew that every sunrise offered another opportunity to tend the earth—and that faithfulness in small tasks often produced the richest harvest.

Return to GoGardenNow.com.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

How to Turn Your Porch Into a Summer Conservatory

There is something wonderfully old-fashioned about a porch filled with thriving plants. Before air conditioning became commonplace, screened porches and covered verandas often served as seasonal conservatories where gardeners displayed their favorite ferns, palms, orchids, and flowering plants during the warm months. A shaded porch became an outdoor living room softened by leaves, blossoms, birdsong, and the gentle movement of summer breezes.

Porch/conservatory AI generated

You don't need an elaborate greenhouse to enjoy that experience. With a little planning, almost any porch, patio, or covered deck can become a lush summer retreat that bridges the comfort of indoors with the beauty of the garden.

Why Use the Porch?

Summer presents challenges for both gardeners and plants. The midday sun can be relentless, while air-conditioned homes often provide too little humidity for tropical plants. A covered porch offers the best of both worlds.

Many houseplants thrive outdoors during summer because they receive:

  • Bright, filtered sunlight
  • Higher humidity
  • Better air circulation
  • Natural rainfall (if exposed)
  • Warm nighttime temperatures

The result is often stronger growth, richer foliage, and even flowering that rarely occurs indoors.

Choose Plants That Love Summer Outdoors

A porch conservatory works best when filled with plants that naturally appreciate warm, humid conditions.

Excellent choices include:

  • Tropical foliage plants
  • Ferns
  • Caladiums
  • Begonias
  • Bromeliads
  • Orchids
  • African violets (on bright but shaded porches)
  • Hoyas
  • Philodendrons
  • Monsteras
  • Peace lilies
  • Snake plants
  • ZZ plants
  • Prayer plants
  • Rex begonias
  • Pothos
  • Spider plants

Many succulents also enjoy spending summer outdoors, provided they receive enough light without being scorched by intense afternoon sun.

Think in Layers

A beautiful conservatory isn't simply a collection of pots—it creates the feeling of stepping into another world.

Arrange plants at several heights.

Use:

  • Hanging baskets overhead
  • Plant stands
  • Small tables
  • Shelving
  • Window boxes
  • Large floor containers
  • Tall specimen plants in corners

Tall palms or fiddle leaf figs provide structure, while cascading ivy or pothos soften shelves and railings.

The varying heights create depth and make even a modest porch feel much larger.

Add Comfortable Seating

Every conservatory deserves a place to linger.

Choose furniture that invites you to stay awhile.

Consider:

  • A wicker chair
  • A wooden rocking chair
  • A porch swing
  • A small café table
  • Cushioned benches

Add a small side table for iced tea, lemonade, or your morning coffee.

A porch becomes far more valuable when it encourages you to sit quietly among your plants rather than merely tending them.

Create Shade Where Needed

Not every porch receives perfect light.

If yours faces west, the afternoon sun may become too intense.

Simple additions can help:

  • Outdoor curtains
  • Bamboo shades
  • Roll-up blinds
  • Shade cloth
  • Tall potted shrubs near exposed edges

These soften harsh sunlight while still allowing plenty of brightness.

 

 Water Without the Mess

Since containers dry more quickly outdoors, establish a simple watering routine.

Helpful strategies include:

  • Self-watering containers
  • Decorative saucers
  • Watering cans kept nearby
  • Moisture-retaining potting mixes
  • Grouping humidity-loving plants together

Morning watering is generally best, allowing foliage to dry before evening.

Bring in a Touch of History

Victorian conservatories were filled with more than plants.

Add character with:

  • Antique watering cans
  • Vintage terracotta pots
  • Cast-iron plant stands
  • Brass misters
  • Old garden books
  • Botanical prints
  • Weathered baskets
  • Wooden crates

These details create charm without feeling overly decorated.

Invite Wildlife

A porch conservatory naturally becomes part of the surrounding garden.

Nearby additions might include:

  • A hummingbird feeder
  • A shallow bird bath
  • Flowering annuals in window boxes
  • Herbs that attract pollinators
  • Fragrant jasmine or gardenias

Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, and songbirds add life and movement throughout the season.

Light It for Evening

 Summer evenings are often the finest time to enjoy a porch.

Soft lighting extends the experience long after sunset.

Consider:

  • Warm white string lights
  • Solar lanterns
  • Battery-operated candles
  • Small uplights beneath large plants
  • Vintage-style porch lamps

Avoid overly bright lighting. Gentle illumination creates a peaceful atmosphere where leaves cast beautiful shadows and every breeze seems a little cooler.

Watch for Pests

Outdoor conditions can introduce insects to your collection.

Inspect plants weekly for:

  • Spider mites
  • Mealybugs
  • Aphids
  • Scale
  • Whiteflies

Most problems are easily controlled when caught early with insecticidal soap, neem oil, or by rinsing foliage with water.

Before bringing plants indoors in autumn, inspect them carefully and treat any pests to avoid introducing unwanted visitors into your home.

Your Own Seasonal Escape

A summer conservatory isn't about perfection. It's about creating a place where the pace slows, the air feels greener, and the cares of the day seem to drift away with the evening breeze.

Whether your porch holds six pots or sixty, it becomes more than an entrance to your home. It becomes a living room beneath the sky—a place to read, pray, sip coffee, visit with friends, or simply admire the quiet miracle of growing things.

In a busy world, that may be one of the finest gardens you can cultivate.

Return to GoGardenNow.com.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Make Your Summer Vegetable Garden Almost Take Care of Itself

Easy care summer garden - AI generated

Every gardener has experienced it.

Spring begins with grand ambitions. Seed packets are opened with excitement. Tomato plants are carefully staked. Beans sprout. Cucumbers climb. Peppers begin to flower.

Then July arrives.

The temperature climbs into the nineties. Humidity hangs in the air like a wet blanket. Weeds seem to grow overnight. The soil dries almost as soon as you've watered it. Insects appear as if they've been waiting for an invitation.

Many vegetable gardens are abandoned long before the harvest is over.

But they don't have to be.

With a little planning, your summer garden can become surprisingly self-sufficient, requiring only a few minutes of attention each day instead of several exhausting hours.

Mulch Is Your Best Friend

If there is one secret to an easy-care vegetable garden, it's mulch.

A thick layer of clean straw around tomatoes, peppers, squash, cucumbers, beans, and other crops keeps the soil cool, conserves moisture, and dramatically reduces weed growth.

As the straw slowly decomposes, it also feeds the soil, encouraging earthworms and beneficial microorganisms.

Unlike bare ground, mulched soil doesn't bake into a hard crust after every hot afternoon.

Aim for a layer four to six inches thick. The investment in straw pays for itself many times over in reduced watering and weeding.

Avoid hay if possible. Hay often contains weed seeds that may create more work than they prevent.

Ground Cover Fabric for Long Rows

For larger gardens, woven landscape fabric or reusable ground cover cloth can be a tremendous labor saver.

Lay the fabric before planting, then cut small openings where your vegetable plants will grow.

Sunlight reaches your vegetables but not the weeds beneath the cloth.

The result is fewer weeds, less evaporation, cleaner vegetables, and easier harvesting.

Unlike plastic sheeting, woven ground covers allow rain and irrigation water to penetrate while still protecting the soil.

Many gardeners use ground cover fabric year after year, making it one of the best long-term investments for a productive garden.

Let Irrigation Do the Work

Dragging hoses around the yard every evening soon becomes tiresome.

Instead, let your watering system do the work.

A simple drip irrigation system connected to an automatic timer delivers water directly to plant roots where it's needed most.

Benefits include:

  • Less evaporation
  • Healthier root systems
  • Reduced water waste
  • Fewer leaf diseases caused by overhead watering
  • Consistent moisture for tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, and squash

Watering early in the morning is generally best, and with an automatic timer, you don't even have to be awake when it happens.

Once installed, an irrigation system may save hundreds of hours over the course of a growing season.

Feed the Soil, Not Just the Plants

Plants growing rapidly during summer appreciate a steady supply of nutrients.

Instead of frequent heavy applications of fertilizer, consider lighter feedings throughout the season.

Finished compost, compost tea, fish emulsion, seaweed extract, or other organic fertilizers help maintain vigorous growth without encouraging excessive leafy growth at the expense of fruit.

Healthy plants naturally tolerate heat, drought, and insects better than stressed plants.

Keep Pests Under Control Before They Become Problems

The easiest pest to control is the one that never gets established.

Rather than waiting until insects overwhelm the garden, inspect plants every few days.

Many organic controls work best while pest populations are still small.

Companion Planting

 Another simple strategy is companion planting. By growing certain herbs and flowers among your vegetables, you can help confuse or repel some insect pests while attracting beneficial insects that prey upon them. Marigolds, nasturtiums, calendula, dill, fennel, alyssum, basil, and borage are popular companions that add beauty to the garden while providing nectar and pollen for lady beetles, lacewings, hoverflies, parasitic wasps, and other natural allies. Companion planting isn't a magic cure for every pest problem, but when combined with good garden sanitation, mulch, proper watering, and timely organic controls, it becomes another valuable tool in keeping your vegetable garden healthy throughout the heat of summer.

Bacillus thuringiensis (BT)

BT is a naturally occurring soil bacterium that specifically targets caterpillars while leaving people, pets, birds, bees, and most beneficial insects unharmed.

It's especially useful on:

  • Tomatoes
  • Cabbage
  • Broccoli
  • Kale
  • Peppers

Apply it when young caterpillars first appear, and repeat as directed after heavy rains.

Sticky Traps

Yellow sticky cards capture flying insects such as whiteflies, fungus gnats, aphids, and leaf miners before populations explode.

Blue sticky traps are particularly attractive to thrips.

Hang them just above plant height and replace them when covered with insects.

They're inexpensive insurance for both vegetable gardens and greenhouses.

Hand Picking

Sometimes the old ways are still the best.

Checking plants for tomato hornworms, squash bugs, beetles, and egg masses every few days often prevents serious infestations with almost no expense.

A bucket of soapy water makes quick work of many unwanted visitors.

Encourage Nature's Helpers

Not every insect is your enemy.

Lady beetles, lacewings, parasitic wasps, hoverflies, praying mantises, spiders, and numerous native pollinators help keep pest populations in balance.

Avoid broad-spectrum insecticides whenever possible. They often eliminate beneficial insects along with the pests.

A healthy garden is an ecosystem, not a battlefield.

Harvest Frequently

One of the easiest ways to increase production is simply to keep picking.

Beans become tougher when left on the vine.

Zucchini quickly become oversized.

Okra grows woody in only a day or two.

Regular harvesting encourages plants to keep flowering and producing throughout the season.

A five-minute walk through the garden every evening with a basket often yields enough vegetables for dinner while helping you spot any developing problems early.

Accept That Perfection Isn't Necessary

No vegetable garden remains flawless through the hottest weeks of summer.

A few insect holes won't ruin your tomatoes.

An occasional yellow leaf isn't cause for alarm.

The goal isn't perfection. The goal is fresh vegetables, healthy soil, and a garden that remains enjoyable rather than becoming another chore.

By combining mulch, automatic irrigation, thoughtful pest management, and a few simple routines, your vegetable garden can thrive through the hottest months with surprisingly little effort.

Instead of spending your summer fighting weeds and hauling hoses, you can spend more time harvesting tomatoes still warm from the sun, gathering crisp cucumbers for supper, and enjoying the quiet satisfaction that comes from a garden that almost seems to care for itself.

After all, the smartest gardener isn't always the one who works the hardest—it's the one who lets good planning do much of the work.

Return to GoGardenNow.com.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Why Every Garden Needs a Place to Sit

 Image by Kerstin Riemer from Pixabay

A garden is not merely something to look at. It is a place to enter, to experience, and to enjoy. Yet many gardens, even beautiful ones, overlook one simple feature that can transform the entire space: a comfortable place to sit.

Whether it's an old wooden bench beneath a shade tree, a weathered Adirondack chair overlooking a flower border, or a small bistro table tucked among containers on the patio, seating changes the way we relate to a garden. It invites us to linger rather than simply pass through.

Gardens Were Always Meant to Be Enjoyed

Throughout history, gardens have included places for quiet reflection.

The cloister gardens of medieval monasteries featured stone benches where monks could read and meditate. English cottage gardens often surrounded a simple bench where neighbors gathered on warm evenings. Southern gardens frequently included swings on porches or beneath sprawling live oaks, offering welcome relief from the afternoon heat.

The lesson is timeless: a garden is not complete until someone can comfortably remain in it.

You'll Notice What Others Miss

When you stop walking and begin sitting, the garden reveals itself.

You hear the gentle buzzing of native bees moving from blossom to blossom. Butterflies drift lazily through the air. A hummingbird suddenly appears among the salvias. The breeze carries the fragrance of gardenias, rosemary, or blooming jasmine.

Even the changing light becomes part of the experience. Morning sunshine catches dew on spider webs. Late afternoon paints flowers in warm golden tones. Twilight brings the chorus of tree frogs and crickets.

These quiet moments are often the greatest rewards of gardening.

A Seat Helps You Become a Better Gardener

Surprisingly, spending time sitting in your garden also makes you a better gardener.

As you relax, you'll notice things that are easy to miss while working:

  • Plants beginning to wilt before they become stressed.
  • Weeds just starting to emerge.
  • Insects that are beneficial as well as those that may become pests.
  • Areas where new color or texture would improve the landscape.
  • Empty spaces that could use another perennial or shrub.

Observation has always been one of a gardener's greatest tools.

The Garden Becomes an Outdoor Room

Modern homes often blur the line between indoors and outdoors, and your garden should do the same.

Adding comfortable seating turns the landscape into another living space.

Morning coffee tastes better surrounded by birdsong.

A quiet afternoon with a favorite book becomes a welcome escape.

An evening conversation with family seems more relaxed beneath the open sky than inside four walls.

The garden becomes an extension of your home rather than something viewed only through a window.

Choose the Right Spot

Where you place a bench or chair matters just as much as the seat itself.

Look for locations that offer something worth enjoying:

  • A favorite flower bed.
  • A bird feeder or birdbath.
  • A specimen tree with beautiful bark or seasonal color.
  • A vegetable garden bustling with bees.
  • A water feature.
  • A distant view across the landscape.

If possible, provide afternoon shade. In much of the South, morning sun and afternoon shade make a seating area comfortable for much longer during the growing season.

Comfort Matters

Even the most beautiful bench won't be used if it's uncomfortable.

Choose sturdy seating with a supportive back. Add weather-resistant cushions if desired. Place a small table nearby for a glass of iced tea, gardening journal, or pair of pruning shears.

If mosquitoes are common, consider locating your seating where a ceiling fan, portable fan, or gentle breeze can help keep insects away.

Make It Feel Inviting

Small touches encourage people to stay longer.

A nearby container overflowing with flowers softens the space.

A climbing rose or fragrant vine growing on an arbor creates a sense of enclosure.

Solar lanterns or low-voltage lighting extend the enjoyment into the evening.

Even a simple birdbath nearby adds movement and sound that make the garden feel alive.

Give Yourself Permission to Rest

Many gardeners feel guilty sitting down when there's always another weed to pull or another bed to mulch.

But gardens aren't judged by how much work they require. They're measured by how much joy they give.

The hours spent quietly enjoying a garden are never wasted. In fact, they may be the very reason the garden exists.

The flowers don't mind if you stop to admire them.

The birds certainly won't complain.

And your body will thank you for taking a few moments to rest.

A Garden Is More Than Plants

The finest gardens are remembered not because they contained the rarest plants, but because they made people want to stay.

So if your garden doesn't yet have a place to sit, consider adding one this season. It needn't be elaborate or expensive. A simple bench beneath a tree, a pair of chairs beside a flower bed, or a porch swing overlooking the landscape may become your favorite part of the entire garden.

After all, gardening isn't only about growing beautiful plants.

It's about creating beautiful moments.

Return to GoGardenNow.com.