Green Thumbs Up: When to prune specific varieties of woody plants

There is an old adage that suggests that one should prune whenever the pruning shears is sharp. Although light pruning in any season is unlikely to cause permanent harm to an established tree or shrub, the timing and magnitude of the pruning process will greatly influence the growth and flowering of most plants.

Home Help: Spruce up your home for spring

Weekly home rail, with items on spring-cleaning the exterior of your home, tips for hiring a builder, ideas for a sweet-smelling garden, and more.

Fast and easy ways to make over a room

Home redesign can be done with a little imagination, a burst of color and a small amount of money.

Checkout Lane: Tips for hiring a house-cleaning service

Looking for a good cleaning service can be as hard as finding the socks that go missing in the laundry, but at least a house cleaner can help you find the socks.

Greenspace: Idiots (like us) need a strong gardening book

“The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Year-Round Gardening” really isn’t just for complete idiots or even pretenders. Delilah Smittle and Sheri Ann Richerson have nondummy gardening credentials. They’ve crafted a book that speaks our language. I’m suggesting it for anybody who needs solid gardening advice, although I wish they’d change the title.

Green Thumbs Up: Pruning 101

While the lingering snow cover and soft, soggy soils may limit raking and spring cleaning our borders, this is an ideal time to begin pruning many dormant trees and shrubs. A late-winter survey of your property’s trees and shrubs should be performed annually. Mid-February to mid-April is a preferred time of year to prune dormant plants since it is considerably easier to view their architecture and observe damaged, diseased, or crossed branches.

 

Gardener's Journal: Anticipating springtime

It has been said that the anticipation of something can be as rewarding as the actual event itself. I think that's why early March is one of my favorite times of the year. Each year about now we're so eagerly awaiting the fulfillment of the promise of spring.

David Robson: Cypress trees are fussy but hardy

Most of us are familiar with the cypress in the swamps, with woody knees poking out of the shallow water. Pond cypress, contrary to what you might think, doesn’t produce as many. Neither produces the knees when planted in the typical landscape where water doesn’t stand. Unlike the larch, the needles of the bald and pond cypress aren’t soft — though not as tough as Scots pine, blue spruce or the Douglas fir.

Home Help: Digital spring cleaning

Weekly home rail, with tips on spring cleaning digital devices, how to update your decor for spring, what to know before painting the exterior of your home, and more.

With improvements large or small, your bathroom can be an oasis

Once so lightly regarded it was relegated to the backyard, bathrooms have come a long way since the days of outhouses and rain barrel tubs. Today the bathroom — especially the master bath — is treated as a coveted living space, and perhaps the most indispensable room in the home.

Don't fear feng shui

Tori Michaels' work in life is often misunderstood, feared even. "There were people who actually grabbed their children and ran away. They said I was working with the devil," said Michaels, a feng shui consultant who moved to the Peoria, Ill., area from St. Louis a couple years ago.

Greenspace: City dwellers no longer locked out of gardening

Urban residents are discovering that despite their lack of a yard, they still can garden. Space once wasted blooms and grows food.

David Robson: Larch is the rare needled tree that sheds

What sets the larch apart, besides breathtaking fall color, is the needles. When the tree starts leafing out in spring, the needles are a soft, lime-green color with a shimmer. As they mature, they take on a soft, dark green color, a little darker than the yew. More importantly, the needles are soft.

Green Thumbs Up: It’s time to think spring

Torrential downpours pummeled South Shore landscapes during the past week, flooding lawns and gardens and scattering debris far and wide.

Home Help: An organized home is a happy home

Weekly home and garden rail, with organization tips, the "new neutrals" in home decor, a guide to raised-bed gardening, and more.

In the Garden: Heirloom seeds a classic alternative in the garden

This is the time you might be thinking about buying seeds to start your vegetables or flowers inside. Somehow the winter seems less harsh when you can cultivate seedlings.

Trees often bear the brunt of a winter storm’s fury

Wild winter weather takes a heavy toll on everything from school calendars to exhausted fleets of snow removal equipment. And Mother Nature seems to have come out a little worse for the wear herself. Here are five things to know about storm-damaged trees.

Greenspace: Gardening the cheap hobby you can eat

Vegetable gardening increased 19 percent last season as 43 million folks chose it as a hobby that also saves money. Then the newcomers went to the store and were shocked to find all the expensive gardening paraphernalia. It doesn’t have to be that way.

David Robson: Giving buds on branches a kick start

The snow has been covering and insulating the ground, making it difficult for some of our early spring bulbs to make themselves known. Without the snowdrops and winter aconite showing, we’re limited in what we can bring indoors. Sure, we can purchase some tulips or paper white narcissus to go along with the amaryllis. But there may be another option.

Green Thumbs Up: Creating outdoor rooms in the landscape

A well-designed property should be both functional and aesthetically pleasing, an extension of your indoor living areas. In the landscape, the sky and the mature tree canopy form the roof; shrubs, walls or fences serve as the walls; and ground covers, grass or hardscape function as the floor.

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