Whatcha Growin Podcast

What’cha Growin? Podcast Episode #2 Mr. Brown Thumb

My first episode was with a very rural gardener, so I thought I would flip the script for the second episode and talk to someone who gardens under very different circumstances. My interview with Ramon Gonzalez begins with a mutual praise for growing bulbs and even delves into his love of some of the same

Grow Write Guild - Year One

Grow Write Guild #27: Loss, Attachment & Letting Go

Just the other day I wrote about the hit my garden took this year as a result of an unusually harsh winter. As spring progressed, I watched a number of particularly beaten plants closely for signs of life or recovery. As April turned to May and the time for recovery was well passed its due

On Letting Go

The time has come for me to accept the losses suffered as a result of a peculiarly difficult winter and move on. I’ve known for months that some of these plants were not going to pull through. It is May now, and well past the time when many of them begin to wake up from

Whatcha Growin Podcast Episode 1

What’cha Growin? Podcast Episode #1 Margaret Roach

This podcast was a longtime in the making. I’m a visually-oriented person; sound is not my forte. It took quite some doing (and a lot of help and encouragement from Davin), but after a seemingly endless stream of hurdles I am pleased to finally launch my new podcast, What’cha Growing?. Since this is the inaugural

Gayla Foraging for Edible Violet Flowers

Much to Do with Violets

Violets (Viola odorata) and (V. sororia) are a spring flowering plant that really don’t get their due. In the midst of so many flashy, bold, spring blooms, they’re nearly forgettable. Violets are a “weed.” They pop up in lawns, aggressively claiming space pretty much wherever they want. They’re seen as “common,” and the generally held

4 Hardy Succulents for Your Garden & Pots

This past winter was a particularly cold and difficult one. I lost a number of plants and there are several others that have come out of dormancy looking shaken and forlorn. It’s frustrating, but I’m also trying to see the positive in this. Holes in the garden offer the opportunity to try something new or

Grow Write Guild - Year One

Grow Write Guild #26: The Physicality of Gardening

I’m a week behind in posting a writing prompt. I came down with some sort of plague that knocked me flat out cold and it seems to have overlapped with the onset of spring seasonal allergies. Through even the worst days when I could barely get up and get dressed, I thought about the garden

Germination Testing

How to Test the Germination Rate of Your Old Seeds

I love to buy, collect, save, and trade seed, but I have to admit that I do not go about it in a particularly organized fashion. While I am careful about where and how I store my seeds and I do have my own “it’s all in my head” system, it doesn’t exactly compare to

Lavender and Purple Sage

Herbs and Edible Flowers Growing Workshop

Next Saturday I’ll be giving a presentation at Plant World in Etobicoke, Ontario (in the suburbs of Toronto) on the topic of Growing Beautiful and Edible Herbs and Edible Flowers in Small Spaces (description below). The store will have copies of my first three books available for sale, including You Grow Girl, Grow Great Grub,

How I Prepare Raised Beds for Early Spring Planting

The weather over the weekend was glorious and full of spring’s promise. As previously mentioned, I took advantage and dove headlong into my early spring to-do list. In a typical spring I charge straight into these chores and make mention of them in passing, but rarely get into the nity-gritty of my process here. This

Gardener’s Back

Chalkboard illustration by Davin Risk. There’s a double meaning to this title and if you’re over 21 I suspect that you know exactly what I’m talking about. I’ve got aches and pains all over. I took advantage of the great weather this weekend to cross several items off of my April garden to-do list. I

My 2014 Herb Experiments (+Giveaway)

My gluttonous seed-hoarding habits seem to be behind me now, or have at least calmed for a spell. This year I have abstained from impulse buys from swollen turnstile racks and I only placed one mail order this season. Of course, I say this having bought 40 packets of seed in Tucson, Arizona last June.