The tiny shot holes in spring greens

The tiny shot holes in spring greens

In late April, a bed of young greens can look perfect at breakfast and peppered by lunch. The arugula leaves are still bright and tender. The mustard seedlings are standing. The radish tops look cheerful. But every leaf has acquired tiny round holes, as if someone spent the morning tapping them with a miniature paper punch. The damage is so…

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How to make garden maintenance faster without making it frantic

How to make garden maintenance faster without making it frantic

Fast garden maintenance should not feel like a raid on your own yard. The best version is quiet, regular, and slightly boring: a few weeds before they seed, a watering check before plants collapse, a path edge before it disappears, and a small repair before it becomes a weekend. Clemson Extension notes that no landscape is maintenance-free, but good planning,…

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Moss care for a garden that wants to stay small

Moss care for a garden that wants to stay small

A moss garden looks quiet, but it is not asking to be ignored. It asks for a different kind of attention than a lawn or perennial border. The work is less about mowing, feeding, and deadheading, and more about moisture, debris, light, surface contact, and patience. Mosses are bryophytes, nonvascular plants without true roots. The National Park Service explains that…

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Xeriscape maintenance after the irrigation timer is turned down

Xeriscape maintenance after the irrigation timer is turned down

A xeriscape is not finished when the irrigation system is installed. In many ways, that is when the honest part begins. Plants still need establishment water. Mulch still shifts. Drip emitters clog. Weeds still notice open soil. A water-wise garden saves water because it is maintained with attention, not because it has been abandoned to gravel. Colorado State University PlantTalk…

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