A living blanket for tired autumn beds

A living blanket for tired autumn beds

By early September, a vegetable bed can look oddly exposed. The tomatoes may still be standing, but the first cleared spaces have begun to appear: a row where beans finished, a square where onions came out, the tired patch where cucumbers finally gave up. The garden is not empty, but it has begun opening little windows of bare soil. That…

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When soil forgets how to drink

When soil forgets how to drink

By late August, a container can look watered and still be thirsty. The surface darkens for a moment, clear beads gather on the potting mix like rain on waxed paper, and then water slips down the inside wall of the pot and appears at the drainage hole almost too quickly. The gardener has watered. The roots, inconveniently, may not have…

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Why the garden smells alive after rain

Why the garden smells alive after rain

The first rain after a dry spell changes a garden before the soil is visibly wet. A smell rises from the path, the mulched beds, the cracks between paving stones, and the dark places under shrubs. It is clean and earthy at once, familiar enough to feel emotional, but not vague at all. The garden is releasing chemistry. Gardeners often…

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Why some leaves grow velvet

Why some leaves grow velvet

Brush your fingers across lamb’s ear on an August morning and the leaf seems almost animal. It is cool, pale, and impossibly soft, like the plant has grown its own weatherproof coat. That softness is not a decorative accident. It is architecture. The velvet on a leaf is made of trichomes: tiny outgrowths from the plant’s surface. Some are simple…

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Why some leaves are cut into perfect circles

Why some leaves are cut into perfect circles

By late July, a rose leaf can look as if someone has touched it with a miniature punch. The edges are not shredded. The center is not speckled. Instead, neat half-moons have vanished from the margins, each one as clean as a bite taken by a very tidy pair of scissors. It is easy to read this as damage, because…

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The short morning life of a squash blossom

The short morning life of a squash blossom

A squash blossom is not a flower that lingers. It opens like a little lantern in the cool part of the morning, spends its best hours in the company of bees, and by afternoon begins to fold, soften, and give itself back to the plant. If you walk the vegetable garden at breakfast, the flowers look generous. If you wait…

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A summer bed that cooks its weeds

A summer bed that cooks its weeds

Soil solarization is gardening’s most disciplined use of a hot spell. Instead of fighting July heat, you borrow it. A bed is watered deeply, covered tightly with clear plastic, and left under the sun until the upper soil becomes hot enough to weaken weeds, weed seeds, some soilborne diseases, and certain pests. It looks almost too simple: bare soil, plastic,…

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The small cuts that keep flowers blooming

The small cuts that keep flowers blooming

By early July, a flower border begins to show its decisions. Some stems are still in full color. Some are carrying petals that have curled, browned, and collapsed around the center. Others have already moved on, quietly swelling seed heads where a bloom used to be. The garden is not finished, but it is changing its mind. Deadheading is the…

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How climbing plants find a handhold

How climbing plants find a handhold

A climbing plant begins with an apparent problem: it wants light, but it has not paid the woody price of a tree. Instead of building a trunk, it borrows the garden. A pea finds netting. A cucumber finds twine. A clematis catches a wire with a curling leafstalk. A grapevine reaches, touches, tightens, and turns a fence into a ladder.…

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