As the temperatures drop, it’s easy to let your outdoor containers fade into the background. But with a few simple tweaks, your planters can stay eye-catching and fresh right through the coldest ...
Country Living on MSN
Some plants do better in containers—here's why
Even if you have an in-ground garden, you should grow some plants in pots 🪴 ...
Hosted on MSN
How to container garden indoors in the winter
Once the fall harvest is in, it seems like there's little for us gardeners to do but peruse seed catalogs and make plans for spring. But if you want to keep growing food throughout the winter, there's ...
Southern Living on MSN
Should You Bring In Your Planters When It Freezes? Here’s What A Garden Expert Says
The short answer: It depends on the plant and the container.
Add a bit of seasonal beauty to your front steps, window boxes, and other outdoor spaces with winter containers. Fill them with greenery, berries, cones, baubles and more. You’ll find many of these ...
Some plants, like avocado trees, grow stronger and more cold hardy as they mature. They also become more difficult to cover.
Perhaps you bought perennials but didn't get a chance to plant them. Maybe you divided existing perennials and only had time to transplant them into pots. Even the hardiest perennial will be subject ...
Perennials and containers make a great gardening combination, but they will quickly go to pot if overlooked in the winter. Plant roots are vulnerable to freezing in containers, where the soil hardens ...
Perennials are a wonderful way to bring color to your garden year after year, whether it's a sprig of lavender or a cluster of chrysanthemums. However, for many, growing flowers and vegetables in ...
Cold weather can quietly undo months of hard work in the garden. While you might think winter means putting your tools away until spring, a few expert-backed quick fixes can protect your plants and ...
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