News

Scientists at the Royal Botanic Gardens are testing ways to design gardens and help gardeners cope with current and future ...
hen Jenica Allen started to redo her yard, there were certain factors she took into account, like how the land has a gentle ...
The kind of plants you can grow have changed slightly in most regions of Canada according to the federal government’s latest ...
The vanilla species grown for its flavoring is finicky. Genes from its wild relatives could help make it hardier — but not if those cousins go extinct.
While many gardeners scan the newly arrived seed catalogs to plan their next growing season, the industry's visionaries are pouring talent and resources into products and ideas they hope will ...
This webinar is the first in the five-part series, Gardening for the Future, and will lay the groundwork for the rest of the series, which will cover specific resilience topics in more detail.
Nitrogen fertilizers used in agriculture contribute significantly to global warming. A new breeding concept, specifically for ...
According to two people familiar with the draft, it would eliminate the bedrock scientific finding that greenhouse-gas ...
Chaos tells a story about climate change in Missouri. That’s the name lifelong gardener Sandy Parrill has given to her acre of garden, and she can tick off the changes she has seen in nearly 40 ...
Climate Change and Gardening at Grosse Pointe Garden Center. Spring isn’t far off! Mark your calendars and start planning and prepping for the season at the Grosse Pointe Garden Center’s ...
Alexandra Jones is a CNET contributor who writes about food, farming, gardening, and climate change. Her work has been published in USA Today, Forbes Food & Wine, Ambrook Research, and the ...
This webinar is the first in the five-part series, Gardening for the Future, and will lay the groundwork for the rest of the series, which will cover specific resilience topics in more detail.