Gardening Tips

Having a garden is a key aspect of a sustainable lifestyle. When you go to the grocery store to buy produce like fruits and vegetables, as well as eggs, each of those items comes with a carbon footprint and other environmental complications. Unfortunately, a lot of industrial-level farming practices aren’t good for the environment and they aren’t sustainable either. Growing your own fruits and vegetables reduces the negative impact that industrial farming has.
We are strong proponents of living a sustainable lifestyle, both by having a garden and by making environmentally friendly choices that put you on a more sustainable path. That includes using less single-use plastic, conserving energy and water, gardening using organic methods, avoiding synthetic chemicals inside and outside of the home, driving less, living off the grid, and other sustainable efforts.

Sustainable living isn’t just good for the planet but it’s good for you too. Often times, living sustainably means simplifying your life – you get more out of life with less. Sustainable living helps avoid unnecessary consumerism, save money, save the earth, and save your sanity all along the way.

Our gardening tips will help guide you to a greener lifestyle that benefits the planet, your pocket, your community, and yourself too. If all of us did just a little bit to be more sustainable, we could have a massive positive impact and change our world.

So let’s explore these gardening tips together and work toward a greener future for our kids and grandkids.

7 min read Fruits And Vegetables

Sweet potatoes (Ipomoea batatas) trace their roots back to the tropical lowlands of Central and South America, where they sprawled across sun-drenched riverbanks and attracted native pollinators—like solitary bees—that nested in nearby bare patches of soil. These vigorous vines can become invasive in frost-free climates, sending up volunteer plants if tubers are left behind. I...

6 min read Fruits And Vegetables

I’m so excited to share these ten tried-and-true tips for coaxing bountiful acorn squash harvests from your garden! Acorn squash (Cucurbita pepo) hails from the temperate woodlands and river valleys of North America, where its ancestors thrived on rich, well-drained soils. In those native habitats, squash vines sprawled across open ground, their bright yellow flowers...

7 min read Fruits And Vegetables

Growing cabbage—those sturdy, leafy heads descended from wild Brassica oleracea in the coastal cliffs of northern Europe—can be immensely rewarding. I love the moment when a tight, vivid green head forms, promising crunchy salads and hearty stews. Yet, it’s such a bummer when your plants bolt in the heat or succumb to voracious caterpillars before...

7 min read Fruits And Vegetables

Kale, a member of the Brassica oleracea family, has its origins in the cool, damp regions of the eastern Mediterranean. In its native habitat—rocky hillsides and coastal cliffs—it thrived in well-drained, moderately fertile soils, sending out sturdy leaves that survived sea breezes and occasional droughts. I love watching those crinkly Blue Curled or Lacinato leaves...

7 min read Gardening Tips

I’m thrilled to share these twelve essential tips for cultivating lush, towering rosemary hedges that will infuse your garden with fragrant beauty! Native to the sun-baked scrublands of the Mediterranean, Rosmarinus officinalis evolved to cling to rocky soil, enduring heat and drought while rewarding passing pollinators—like solitary bees and hoverflies—with nectar-rich blooms. I know how...

6 min read Flowers And Houseplants

I absolutely adore how orchids—those elegant epiphytes native to the tropical rainforests of Asia, Central America, and beyond—perch on tree branches, their roots exposed to the humid air and dappled light. In the wild, they host tiny pollinators like solitary bees or even specialized moths, and their aerial roots cling to bark, drawing moisture and...

7 min read Flowers And Houseplants

A moon garden is a sanctuary that awakens under twilight’s soft embrace—filled with blooms that glow in pale hues, exude heady nighttime fragrances, and beckon crepuscular pollinators nesting among their petals. Imagine stepping outside at dusk to be greeted by billowing white trumpets, silvery foliage, and blossoms that seem to shimmer beneath the moon’s glow!...

5 min read Flowers And Houseplants

Wandering Jew (Tradescantia spp.) is one of my go-to houseplants when I want instant color and carefree growth. Native to tropical regions of Central and South America, these trailing beauties offer vibrant, striped foliage that practically dances over the edges of pots and hanging baskets. While some species, like Tradescantia fluminensis, can become invasive outdoors...

6 min read Flowers And Houseplants

Spider plants (Chlorophytum comosum) are beloved for their arching green-and-white foliage and cascading spiderettes—like a living chandelier! Native to tropical and southern Africa, they thrive in well-draining soil and bright, indirect light. But when their roots sit in soggy conditions, those cheerful leaves can quickly turn limp, yellow, or brown, signaling the dreaded root rot....