How to Plan a Sustainable Garden That Feeds Your Family All Year Long
This post may contain affiliate links, please read our privacy policy for details. When I first started gardening with the goal of feeding my family, and…
How to Design Your Garden for Maximum Harvest and Minimal Work. Companion planting, succession planting, and permaculture.
This post may contain affiliate links, please read our privacy policy for details. When I first started gardening with the goal of feeding my family, and…
Garden planning can reduce the risk of wasted efforts like when you plant too early, and a surprise frost wipes you out. Plant too late,…
What to Plant Next to Strawberries, Blueberries & Plants to Avoid Near Berries When I first planted berries, I was so excited about the fruit…
When I first started gardening, I planted everything in neat little rows like I’d seen in old farm fields. But then I learned about companion…
(Even If You’re Just Starting Out) When I first started dreaming about a self-sufficient garden, my mind went straight to fruit. Fresh strawberries still warm…
How to Build, Fill, and Plant for Success! Raised bed gardening took me from the old-fashioned route — tilling up a patch of ground and…
A self-sufficient garden is all about working with nature, not against it. Pesticides don’t just kill bad bugs — they wipe out the good guys too and can mess with soil health, water quality, and even your crops themselves. The goal is to create a balanced ecosystem where pests are kept in check naturally, without disrupting the whole system.
Understanding Water Quality in Your Garden: How to Test, Filter, and Improve Your Water Source. When I first started gardening, I didn’t give much thought to water. As long as the hose worked and the plants weren’t wilting, But over the years, I learned the hard way that water quality matters — a lot!
Starting seeds indoors when the air is still crisp and to cool to grow can fast-track your growing season, allowing you to have a longer…
Healthy soil is the real secret sauce to a thriving garden. If you take the time to build nutrient-rich, living soil, your plants will reward you with stronger roots, bigger harvests, and fewer pest problems.