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National Gardening Michael MacCaskey |
Summer Bulbs Consider these for summer color |
National Gardening Lynn Ocone |
Planning a Vegetable Garden How to design and build a vegetable garden that really works |
National Gardening Jack Ruttle |
Soil for Seed Starting Plant seeds in the right soil mix |
National Gardening Bruce Butterfield |
Gardeners: Start Your Seeds! Our own "professional" home gardener shares his methods |
National Gardening |
Preparing to Plant Peas Peas are everyone's garden favorite. There's nothing like the taste of fresh sweet peas in spring. Here's some history and tips on planting peas. |
National Gardening National Gardening editors |
Choosing Pea Varieties Peas are fun and easy to raise because they take very little work and mature rapidly. It's possible to grow them in any part of the country, even though English and edible-podded peas prefer cool, moist weather. |
National Gardening |
Planting Peas You can plant peas in a number of different fashions. Check to see which one suits your garden best. |
National Gardening Deborah Wechsler |
The Hot New Sugar Snaps We compare 1995 varieties with the original |
National Gardening Charlie Nardozzi |
Red Light Tomatoes Phytophthora disease (Phytophthora capsici), known as damping off on seedlings, seedling death, leaf blight, or fruit rot on mature plants, is an annual problem with home and commercial gardeners. Now researchers have a new safe technique to prevent this disease: red light.
a new safe technique to prevent this disease. |
National Gardening Charlie Nardozzi |
Soft Colors are Back Much like in the world of fashion and interior design, gardening color trends come and go. After the bold and dashing colors of the late 1990s, with the economic downturn and world crises, interest has shifted the last few years to more traditional darker, richer, colors. |
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