We’ve moved many times, and our plants never move with us. Instead, they are gifted to friends, family, and neighbors. Once we arrive at our new home, the process of adding plants to the space starts all over again.
Years ago we were walking through a big box store and noticed a shelf full of plants living inside, under fluorescent lights. We assumed the plants were artificial.
On a December afternoon before Christmas, our grandmotherly neighbor, Miss Norma, invited us into her home to make nature-inspired, dried floral bauble ornaments.
Do you want to know the easiest crop to grow? Potatoes! At this point, we can’t even stop growing them. Let me tell you our story.One spring, we were cleaning out our pantry and found a small bag of forgotten potatoes.
We headed out to the Mill City Farmers Market in late winter in Minnesota. It’s essential to embrace the cold, snowy, dark season with realistic expectations and a hearty dose of enthusiasm.
Driving around Tennessee, we noticed a profusion of native pink roses blooming from a wild bush growing along the country roads—stunningly beautiful and thriving with no attention from anyone.
When we began building our garden beds for our Tennessee farm, we wanted it to feel like an intimate garden setting, even though it was being constructed in the middle of a five-acre plot.
We had moved into our 5-acre homestead in February—trees, plants, and grass were still very much in hibernation mode, but I was anxious to start planning our garden.
February in Minnesota is cold and dark, and finding ways to feel cozy and warm is imperative: candles, fires, twinkly lights, warm drinks, and gatherings with friends helps.
Thinking about pumpkins in the summer? Probably not. But you should. Growing your own pumpkin patch is so fun and easy, but pumpkins take 100 to 120 days to mature.
Our front yard in Minnesota received the most sun, so it only made sense to create my garden there. I would head out in the spring mornings and work towards ripping the lawn up.
I have now built six gardens from scratch and I am about to start my seventh garden this spring. I would like to stop these shenanigans and stay put with this next garden I create!
A few months ago, our neighbor was over for tea and cookies. “I was approved to host honey bees on my property, and my payment will be free honey,” she said.
We were living in New York City in a studio apartment and I was hankering to get my hands in a bit of soil after moving from Minnesota where we had a large yard and garden.
March winds and April showerscan blow your plants away.So start your seeds inside the houseand plant outside in May.Hollie HobbieWhen we first started gardening, we were so excited to start from scratch with seeds grown indoors.
I am sorry to say that Peter was not very well during the evening. His mother put him to bed, and made some camomile tea: and she gave a dose of it to Peter!
As we were driving home in November, I spotted a brilliant, beautiful red-berried shrub alongside the road. It was growing on an abandoned lot, so I took a mental note of its location.
One of our favorite traditions during every Christmas season is to bring a bit of the garden indoors during a time when most of our plants are resting.
When I was ten my grandmother gifted us tulip bulbs to plant alongside our home. She had brought them back from a trip to Holland and waited for the fall to present them to us.
“All that summer Miss Rumphius, her pockets full of seeds, wandered over fields and headlands, sowing lupines.”-Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney Fields of wildflowers, along the highways of Texas in the spring, are a glorious sight.
Mornings at home are for “school,” but after that, it is outside time. The fairies are usually the first destination. It seems to be a good transition space from indoors to outdoors.
Plant propagation: The process of growing a new plant from a mother plant by seeds, cuttings, or other plant parts.It was a few days before Christmas when we heard a knock at our door—our sweet neighbors bearing gifts and Christmas greetings!
We had moved to a new town in a new state. We left our home, friends, and family for work opportunities. I was hoping it would be temporary - Texas was so foreign compared to our cozy, familiar place in Minnesota.
How Sarah Frémont’s Scandinavian Roots Inspire Her Pattern-Filled Home (and Her Tips for Filling Your Home With Pattern, Too!) Sarah Frémont isn’t afraid of pattern.
When we first moved into our fixer upper, the outside of the home looked like a haunted house—the limestone in front had blackened, the front door had rotting wood, and weeds had run amok in the yard.
Greetings from the mountains of New Mexico! In our new mountain garden we are busy restoring the long ago abandoned garden beds: weeding, building borders, and adding my favorite compost.