If you've noticed pools of water on your lawn, troughs of soil being swept away, or an increase in the amount of insects in the area, then you may be dealing with poor drainage in your sloped yard.
The Garden Magazine on MSN
Combining Trees, Shrubs, and Perennials For The Perfect Layered Garden
There’s a particular kind of garden that stops you in your tracks. It doesn’t shout. It draws you in quietly, with depth at every level, something blooming or holding structure at each height. That ...
Walk past an uncut patch of big bluestem in January and you’ll hear it before you see it. The dry stalks rustle, a sparrow ...
Ottawa Citizen on MSN
In the garden: Beating the heat with plants for hot, dry summers
There is no doubt that weather patterns are changing because of climate change. Summers are hotter, and at the same time ...
Better Homes & Gardens on MSN
7 landscape plants that increase your home’s fire risk, according to an expert
These common landscape plants could spark trouble during fire season.
† Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, 203 Engineering Hall, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701, United States ‡ Department of Biology, University of Arkansas at ...
What is a rain garden, and how does it work? Rain gardens, sometimes called bio-retention areas, are shallow depressions in the landscape that capture stormwater and allow it to gradually percolate ...
Water Treatment Technology Laboratory, South Carolina Water Resources Center, Clemson University, 509 Westinghouse Rd., Pendleton, South Carolina 29670, United States Department of Plant and ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results