Dr. Eve Beaury’s research reveals the outsize role American gardeners still play in supporting the propagation and spread of plants that are known to be invasive.
An Ecological Gardening Firm’s 12-Step Program
The Overlooked Virtues of Native Annual Flowers
A Local Activist With a National Impact
A Low-Cost Swimming Pool that Saves Energy and Serves Biodiversity
Helping Native Plants Outrun Climate Change
A Conversation with Growing Greener’s New Partner
Award-winning landscape designer Edwina von Gal describes her Perfect Earth Project’s dual approach to changing the culture of land care in the United States: building a constituency among land owners and gardeners for ecologically-based, toxin-free design and maintenance while educating landscapers in how to serve this new market.
DOGE is Destroying an Essential, Inexpensive Foundation of American Agricultural Greatness
The Lawn Mower as Ecological Design Tool
Slugs “Don’t Get No Respect
Benjamin Vogt Explains Why He Prefers Clay Soils
A Pioneering Native Plant Supplier That’s Equally Remarkable as an Educator
Collecting Seeds to Grow Locally Adapted Native Plants
“Roll Out Gardens”
Stoneleigh: a Natural Garden
Ethan Kauffman, Director of Stoneleigh, describes the 9-year process his team has pursued, enriching a classic Philadelphia Mainline estate with thousands of species of native plants, to transform it into a model for how to honor traditional landscape aesthetics while boosting biodiversity and serving the local ecosystem
Starting the Next Generation Indoors
11 Generations of Stewarding the Land
The Garden Benefits of Backyard Ducks
Slow Flowers
High Performing Plants
It’s not an either/or choice, native vs. introduced, for Claudia West of Phyto Studio when this leader of the ecological gardening movement develops a plant palette for one of her innovative landscapes. What she seeks, besides selections that serve the customers’ needs and delight the eye, are “high performing” species and cultivars that provide maximum benefits to the local ecosystem, regardless of place of origin.