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Horticulture

September/October 2021
Magazine

Since 1904, Horticulture Magazine has provided avid gardeners and plantspeople with accurate, compelling coverage of gardens and the plants and design techniques that truly make them shine. Our in-depth features take you to outstanding gardens and explain their plants and practices.

EDITOR’S NOTE

Horticulture

CABBAGE & CO. • Niki Jabbour’s must-grow cole crops, plus tips and tasks for the season

AUTUMN CHECKLIST

A RAY OF HOPE • Native bees need space for foraging, and solar farms may be part of a solution

NATIVE TURF • Oat grasses and creeping wildflowers combine in a reimagined lawn at Cornell Botanic Gardens

PLANTS WE LOVE • Inaugural Plants of the Mt. Cuba Collection

PAPAYA LOVE • A dwarf version of this tropical tree brings interest—and, with hope, sweet fruits—to a Rhode Island container garden

STEVE FOLTZ • Working to build healthy habitats for animals and people alike

FOOD in FOCUS • SUMMER’S END IS THE PERFECT TIME TO BUILD A TACTICAL PLAN FOR NEXT YEAR’S VEGETABLE GARDEN

SIZE UP • DON’T SHY FROM BULKY PERENNIALS — EVEN AMID THEIR COMPACT COUSINS, THEY DESERVE THEIR SPACE

Growing Minds • Gardening provides key lessons to children as they move through ages and stages

TODDLER AND PRESCHOOLER

The Charms and Challenges of Mountain Ash • THE GENUS SORBUS COMPRISES MANY HANDSOME SPECIES THAT REWARD THE STEADFAST GARDENER WITH SEVERAL SEASONS OF BEAUTY

Sorbus sampler

Sorbus sampler

small & sweet • THE MOST DIMINUTIVE DAFFODILS ARE UP TO THE TASK OF SPREADING SPRING CHEER

DOWN TO EARTH • GARDENERS CAN HELP FIGHT CLIMATE CHANGE BY ADOPTING THE SOIL-CARE METHODS ESPOUSED ON NO-TILL FARMS

RECOMMENDED READING

IT’S ELEMENTAL • Plants and animals are built of the same elements; where we differ lies in how we exist

BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN

EXPERT ADVICE: MAKE AN INSECT HAVEN

4 GROUND-LEVEL PLANTS FOR AUTUMN COLOR

ONE LAST LOOK

THE TWISTS AND TURNS OF A TOUR


Expand title description text

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

Home & Garden

Languages

English

Since 1904, Horticulture Magazine has provided avid gardeners and plantspeople with accurate, compelling coverage of gardens and the plants and design techniques that truly make them shine. Our in-depth features take you to outstanding gardens and explain their plants and practices.

EDITOR’S NOTE

Horticulture

CABBAGE & CO. • Niki Jabbour’s must-grow cole crops, plus tips and tasks for the season

AUTUMN CHECKLIST

A RAY OF HOPE • Native bees need space for foraging, and solar farms may be part of a solution

NATIVE TURF • Oat grasses and creeping wildflowers combine in a reimagined lawn at Cornell Botanic Gardens

PLANTS WE LOVE • Inaugural Plants of the Mt. Cuba Collection

PAPAYA LOVE • A dwarf version of this tropical tree brings interest—and, with hope, sweet fruits—to a Rhode Island container garden

STEVE FOLTZ • Working to build healthy habitats for animals and people alike

FOOD in FOCUS • SUMMER’S END IS THE PERFECT TIME TO BUILD A TACTICAL PLAN FOR NEXT YEAR’S VEGETABLE GARDEN

SIZE UP • DON’T SHY FROM BULKY PERENNIALS — EVEN AMID THEIR COMPACT COUSINS, THEY DESERVE THEIR SPACE

Growing Minds • Gardening provides key lessons to children as they move through ages and stages

TODDLER AND PRESCHOOLER

The Charms and Challenges of Mountain Ash • THE GENUS SORBUS COMPRISES MANY HANDSOME SPECIES THAT REWARD THE STEADFAST GARDENER WITH SEVERAL SEASONS OF BEAUTY

Sorbus sampler

Sorbus sampler

small & sweet • THE MOST DIMINUTIVE DAFFODILS ARE UP TO THE TASK OF SPREADING SPRING CHEER

DOWN TO EARTH • GARDENERS CAN HELP FIGHT CLIMATE CHANGE BY ADOPTING THE SOIL-CARE METHODS ESPOUSED ON NO-TILL FARMS

RECOMMENDED READING

IT’S ELEMENTAL • Plants and animals are built of the same elements; where we differ lies in how we exist

BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN

EXPERT ADVICE: MAKE AN INSECT HAVEN

4 GROUND-LEVEL PLANTS FOR AUTUMN COLOR

ONE LAST LOOK

THE TWISTS AND TURNS OF A TOUR


Expand title description text