Mike Lizotte, the “Seedman” of American Meadows and High Country Gardens discusses his companies’ program to provide locally adapted wildflower and native grass seed mixes throughout the United States, and the growing enthusiasm among gardeners nationwide for environmentally beneficial plantings
The Mind of a Bee
In his fascinating new book, “The Mind of a Bee,” Dr. Lars Chittka explores not only bees’ ability to learn and process information, but also the evidence that individual bees possess distinctive personal psychologies. His research transformed my understanding of pollinators and enriched my garden experience.
Garden Help From the Cornell Lab of Ornithology
One of my favorite gardening tools is the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the #1 resource for gardeners who want to know more about the birds in their landscapes. Join Dr. Emma Greig to explore the apps and online courses the Lab offers to help you identify and foster feathered visitors, and citizen science programs you can support to promote bird conservation
Toni Gattone and Lifelong Gardening
Senior and physically challenged gardeners have a special interest in sustainable landscapes, according to Toni Gattone, author of The Lifelong Gardener: Garden With Ease and Joy At Any Age. Join her for guidance on everything from saving your back by reducing resource inputs to ergonomically adapting favorite tools.
The Power of Reseeding Native Annuals
A Modern-Day Garden Hero
Cathy Ludden epitomizes the role individual gardeners can play in transforming their local landscapes to meet our current environmental challenges. An avid student of native plants and wildlife, she has worked with great success at a personal, neighborhood, and county level to make her community biologically richer, ecologically healthier –and more beautiful.
Spring-Flowering Bulbs: Beautiful and Sustainable
Inheritor of a century-old family tradition of supplying the best spring-flowering bulbs to American gardeners, Brent Heath details the important role that they can play in today’s sustainable gardens. Flourishing without the use of chemicals, these plants furnish reliable early spring color and food for early season pollinators; follow Brent’s growing tips and your bulbs will return year after year as the toughest of perennials.
Wild By Design
Fostering wildlife and native plants – making our landscapes contributors to the local ecosystem – has become a goal of so many gardeners. In her new book, “Wild By Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration,” Laura J. Martin traces how this became so. Introducing a remarkable band of ecologically minded pioneers, many of them women, Martin describes how this consciousness spread through the land preservation and gardening communities, how the understanding of restoration has changed over time, and what the future may hold with climate change.
Dutch Gardeners Explore A New Relationship With Nature
Planting Native Spring Ephemerals Instead of Dutch Bulbs
Gardeners are busy now planting Dutch bulbs for a spring show, but there is an environmentally more beneficial alternative: native spring ephemerals. Neil Diboll, founder and president of Prairie Nursery, shares how to use these early blooming natives to create truly perennial early spring color while also benefiting pollinators and other wildlife.
Rain Barrel Gardening
Too often environmentally conscious gardeners look for the “silver bullet” for our sustainability and resource issues, rather than contenting ourselves with what Kathy Connolly describes as “two percent solutions.” Kathy, an in-demand natural garden designer and educator, is referring to small changes that cumulatively can have a big impact. Listen to her describe her use of rain barrels as a convenient, inexpensive way to conserve drinking water, reduce energy usage, and make gardening more fun.
An Organic Makeover for Your Lawn
Late summer through early fall, according to Shay Lunseth, is the ideal time to put your lawn on a more environmentally friendly path. Shay’s got advice about boosting the health of your grass without chemicals, reducing or ending inputs of fertilizer and water, and even making your lawn pollinator friendly
Fighting Global Warming with Biochar
Biochar has been touted as a valuable soil amendment that fosters better plant growth and stretches fertilizer budgets. Will Hessert and Javaughn Henry have also found in it a means to sequester carbon and confront global climate change. Listen as Will describes how they are putting in place a project to convert municipal landscape waste into biochar on a grand scale
Starting Native Plants From Seed
Starting native plants from locally sourced seed is the most economical and ecologically advantageous way to rewild domestic landscapes. In the past, though, this has been perceived as tricky and demanding, a process only for experts. Anna Fialkoff, Ecological Programs Manager of the Wild Seed Project in North Yarmouth, Maine, describes how her organization makes starting native plants from seed affordable and easy, even for novices
A Gardener’s Brawl Examined
Admirers of exotic garden plants have taken to claiming that their foreign-born treasures are just as good nutritionally for our North American pollinators. Proponents of native plants insist that their flora supplies a better diet. We ask Dr. Harland Patch of Pennsylvania State University for the facts
Drought-Proofing the Garden with Nancy DuBrule-Clemente
Managing water is the crucial task of the summertime garden, especially as climate change boosts the heat and the frequency of droughts. Join Nancy DuBrule-Clemente, founder of the pioneering woman-owned landscape company and garden center, Natureworks, as she brings her organic gardening sensibility to bear on ways to reduce watering while weathering our warming summers
Learning to See With Botanical Art
Looking at plants is one thing; learning to truly see them is another. Carrie Roy, Acting Curator of Art, introduces us to one of the world’s great collections of plant portraits, the Hunt Institute For Botanical Documentation in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and shares how the artist’s vision can delight and inform gardeners, changing the very way we see
Rebecca McMackin Bids Good-Bye to Brooklyn Bridge Park
Rebecca McMackin, a visionary horticulturist, has spent the last decade supervising the transformation of Brooklyn Bridge Park, 85 acres of abandoned shipping piers, into a complex of functioning ecosystems that serve as havens for wildlife and an accessible means for city dwellers to reconnect with nature. Now she’s moving on to new adventures. In our conversation she reflects on the accomplishments of Brooklyn Bridge Park’s remarkable horticultural staff, the acute need for such landscapes in a rapidly urbanizing world, and how gardening can influence not only our relationship with the natural world but also with each other.
Introducing Rewilding Magazine
Born in North America in the 1980’s, “Rewilding” has taken off in Europe, where it’s inspiring a return of broad tracts of marginal farmlands to functioning wild ecosystems. In this episode Canadian journalists Kat Tancock and Domini Clark discuss their new online magazine, “Rewilding,” which introduces readers to the basics of this fascinating worldwide movement, while helping them to apply its dynamics to their own back yards
Creating an Eco-Friendly Native Lawn
With some 40 million acres of lawn in the continental United States, transforming that feature of our landscapes presents the greatest opportunity for an environmental up-grade in our gardens. Krissy Boys, the Natural Areas Horticulturist of the Cornell Botanical Gardens in Ithaca, New York, has shown how to do that. She’s replanted an area of conventional turf, replacing the European-descended lawn grasses with naturally compact native grass species and a complex of low-growing perennial flowers to support pollinators. Krissy has dramatically reduced the need for mowing, eliminated lawn watering and fertilization, and made her re-designed turf into a richly functioning part of the local ecosystem. Join our conversation to hear the details of how she accomplished this