Written for passionate gardeners, Fine Gardening provides inspired ideas backed by detailed instructions for creating healthy gardens, outdoor rooms, and beautiful landscapes suited to the region. Horticulturists, nurserymen, and designers share their expertise on plants, care, soil, eco-friendly pest control, propagation, design, and landscaping.
A fool and his garden
Fine Gardening Magazine
Keep the indoor plant content coming
READERS’ TIPS • FROM ONE GARDENER TO ANOTHER
SUPER COOL PLANTS • Find out what the experts are growing
GOTTA HAVE IT!
COVER CROPS: The only plants you’ll be happy to kill
Types of cover crops • Typical cover crops are annuals, biennials, or short-lived perennials (three to five years). Each has its pros and cons. Here are a few of my favorite plants to use as cover crops.
The perfect antidote to the winter blues
Plant with a plan for their demise • Selecting a cover crop should be a thoughtful process that takes into account the end (how you’ll get rid of it) before you even plant the seeds. Yes, you want to select a certain type of cover crop to address your specific soil problem. But the last thing gardeners need is to plant a crop that becomes a weed they can’t get rid of. Here are a few of the options for ensuring a proper end.
Bringing your houseplants back in
Timing is a matter of degrees • In most regions of the country, freezing temperatures are an imminent issue right about now. Try not to procrastinate until the weatherman predicts frost approaching in a few hours.
THE BEST NATIVE PERENNIALS • Experts from across the country pick their favorite high-impact stars
California • Red-flowered buckwheat may be small, but it has focal-point power
Northeast • Northern maidenhair fern is a textural wonder for the shade
Southern Plains • Standing cypress is a reblooming hummingbird magnet
Midwest • Sundrops is a ray of light in summer and an essential pollinator plant
Mountain West • Sulphur flower is an adaptable evergreen that shines in every season
Mid-Atlantic • Wild bee balm is a long-blooming, tough-as-nails stunner
Northwest • Twinflower is an attractive, low-care ground cover
MANY PLANTS, ONE GARDEN • Is it possible to be a crazy plant collector and still have a beautiful garden? You bet your agave it is.
Who needs flowers when you’ve got texture?
CONTAINERS THAT CELEBRATE THE SEASON • These durable, decorative plantings will carry you from mid-fall into the new year
Tips for working with winter bloomers
FRESH LOOKS FOR FALL • Steadfast performers get a boost from companions with late-season appeal
Stars with staying power • Everyone needs plants that they can count on. Here are a few low-maintenance favorites from our gardens that look great all season without a lot of fuss.
Not too big, NOT TOO SMALL • These grasses have manageable habits that bring form and texture to the places you need it most
Cool-and warm-season grasses • Not all ornamental grasses are built the same. Grasses respond and begin to grow based upon air and soil temperature. Some grasses start to emerge early in spring—sometimes as soon as the snow melts—when temperatures are still cool. Others wait until the soil is warm and air temperatures are more stable, leading some gardeners to mistakenly assume they died over the winter. The following is a list of characteristics and care requirements of cool- and warm-season grasses.
NORTHWEST
CALIFORNIA
SOUTHERN PLAINS
NORTHERN PLAINS
MIDWEST
SOUTH
NORTHEAST
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE • Here is a handy guide to help you pronounce the botanical names in this...