Fall may be the most crucial time of year for lawn care, especially if you want to see lush green in the spring. It all comes ...
To use leaves as fertilizer, you can keep it as simple as mowing over them and leaving them in the yard or go through the ...
If your trees or lawn start the season looking more lemon than lime, you may be seeing iron chlorosis—a common nutrient ...
A healthy lawn isn’t built overnight—it’s built in the soil. The right organic fertilizer does more than make your grass green for a few weeks. It feeds the microorganisms that keep your soil alive, ...
Watering restrictions in the St. Johns River Water Management District have returned to once per week. The change is due to ...
Neil Sperry gives advice on a dying ligustrum, pecan scab ruining crops, yellowing red oaks, zoysia repairs before a wedding, ...
Generally, we are most active in the garden in the spring and early summer, but this is the time to do some planning.
Attached is a photo of my red oak tree. It has been yellow in color the past two years, and it is dying slowly now. I’ve ...
How are you progressing on your to-do list as you put your beds to sleep for the winter? The weather has been giving ...
“Winter is an etching, spring a watercolor, summer an oil painting, and autumn a mosaic of them all.” – Stanley Horowitz.