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It’s easy to gloss over underrated plants when designing a yard, but as experts reveal, it’s both us and our gardens that are ...
People are ready to put down roots. So here’s a look at eight trees that are — for better or worse — popularly planted in ...
Walk With a Friend at Tualatin Hills Nature Park: 9 a.m. first Wednesdays and third Sundays. Take a guided walk and learn ...
That is part of why we love living here. Oregon is a biological treasure chest and home to 800 varieties of endangered native ...
When it comes to getting hyacinths to bloom again, the trick is to grow them in very well-drained soil. A raised bed or rockery is best in our damp climate; hyacinth bulbs rot quickly in damp soil.
Ephemerals are unusual plants that love early spring weather: cool and a bit wet. They bring color and otherworldly flowers to shadier corners. They tend to hug the ground plane, avoiding the cold, ...
The plant itself is low-growing and spreads rapidly; in the spring it sends up lovely purplish-blue flowers on slender stalks that “dance” in my woodland garden. For part-shade, there is ...
Expanding their presence in the Pacific Northwest reinforces the Bay Club's campus-driven model, which creates spaces where people connect, grow, and thrive together. A short drive north from Bay ...
Luckily, there are a range of plants and flowers that thrive in the shade, and a gardening expert has revealed the most beautiful ones, which also happen to be simple to grow - making them a ...
Beth Chatto’s Plants and Gardens in Elmstead, near Colchester, was the only one in the county on the list. This huge garden was originally created by the famous gardener Beth Chatto OBE VMH in 1960.
our travel itinerary to the Pacific Northwest featured zero downtime. Few places in the country jam as much geographic diversity, culinary delights and cultural and historic interest as Oregon ...
If you're pondering plants for shade, you've come to the right place. Some corners of your plot may be dark, but they needn't be dull, as plenty of pretty perennials thrive in gloomier conditions.