![]() ![]() – Barbara Pleasant, best-selling author of over twenty gardening books and longtime writer for Mother Earth News “All herbs are cut-and-come-again plants, so you can look forward to a long season of gathering gourmet sprigs, with extra to put up for the winter.” Tallamy, ecologist and author of the best-selling Nature’s Best Hope And the birds came because of the moths!” The moths that I am counting returned because of native plants. … The seemingly astounding rebound of species on my property was actually neither astounding nor accidental. “We have waged war on many insects and ignored the basic needs of the rest for so long that now most insects are in trouble. In “Befriend ‘The Little Things That Run the World’” … –the “Grumpy Gardener,” aka Steve Bender, gardening editor at Southern Living and author of many inspirational (and entertaining!) gardening books Let’s undertake a rational assessment of possible fruit for the home garden, praising the good and excoriating the bad.” “Which ones should you grow? Which ones should you run from? Many fruit take gobs of time-sucking maintenance. – Eric Lee-Mäder, co-director of the Pollinator Conservation Program at the Xerces Society and author of many books, including the upcoming The Milkweed Lands It will become something that’s no longer a project but instead a place.” You can make a meadow by diversifying an existing grassy or weedy area with more native wildflowers. Instead, we look to nature for a garden that is not only naturally beautiful but also sustains and improves quality of life-for plants, pollinators, and humans! ![]() When we review this year’s edition as a whole, what do we see? Contrived, high-maintenance landscapes are a thing of the past. The country’s best-selling garden authors and experts all contributed their knowledge about the gardens of today and tomorrow. Hear From Top Experts Across the Continent ![]()
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