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Shady corners can turn into tick friendly spots when the ground stays damp, messy, and overgrown.

That is why many Oregon homeowners are rethinking what they plant under trees, along fence lines, and beside woodland edges.

The right ground cover can make those areas look cared for while leaving fewer hidden spaces for pests to settle. It can also replace ...


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What separates a cucumber vine that delivers all season from one that simply fades out? Illinois growing conditions do not split the difference.

Your soil holds moisture like a sponge one week and cracks like old ceramic the next. Striped beetles do not scout ahead, they show up in numbers and they move fast.

You plant with confidence, you water consistent...


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Panicle hydrangeas are the workhorses of the North Carolina summer garden.

They handle heat better than other hydrangea types, they bloom reliably even in difficult spots, and those large cone-shaped flower heads put on a show that carries straight through into fall.

Most gardeners treat them as completely self-sufficient, which is mostly fair, but there’...


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Your roses looked breathtaking yesterday. Today, they look like something chewed through them without a second thought.

Small, shiny, and copper-green, the culprit has an appetite that makes no apologies and a taste for every thriving plant in your Virginia garden. These invaders do not snack.

They feast. They work through roses, grape leaves, fruit trees,...


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Lantana is supposed to be one of the easiest bloomers in an Ohio summer garden. Heat tolerant, low maintenance, covered in color from June straight through fall.

So why do so many pots and beds hit a wall in midsummer where the blooms just stop showing up? Most people blame the weather or assume the plant needs replacing.

The real answer is almost always a...


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