Editorial Pillars
Explore by Category
Destinations
Destinations from Green Gardens, shaped by its Garden & Outdoor focus.
Planning Guides
Planning Guides from Green Gardens, shaped by its Garden & Outdoor focus.
Food & Culture
Food & Culture from Green Gardens, shaped by its Garden & Outdoor focus.
Adventure Notes
Adventure Notes from Green Gardens, shaped by its Garden & Outdoor focus.
Latest Posts
View all →
2026 Garden Trends: Vertical, Water‑Wise & Tech‑Savvy Ideas for Small Yards
Discover the top 2026 garden trends—vertical gardens, water‑wise design, and smart tech—tailored for compact suburban spaces.
Callie RiversMarch 17, 2026
Edible Perennials for Zone 7b: A Practical Garden Design Guide
Discover the top edible perennials for USDA Zone 7b and how to design a thriving, low-maintenance garden that feeds you year after year.
Callie RiversMarch 15, 2026
Embracing Green: Sustainable St. Patrick's Day Celebrations – Eco‑Friendly Tips for a Festive Holiday
Turn your St. Patrick's Day into a celebration that honors the leprechauns and the planet with practical, low‑waste tips from my backyard garden.
Callie RiversMarch 14, 2026
March Pest Control Without Spraying: How I Let My Garden Fight Its Own Battles
I stopped spraying everything — even neem — three years ago and my pest problems actually got better. Here's my no-spray March playbook for Zone 7b: companion planting for predators, water blasting, slug patrol, and letting your garden build its own immune system.
Callie RiversMarch 13, 2026
Mason Bees in March: Why I Ditched Honeybee Dreams for Native Pollinators
I wasted years waiting for honeybees that never came. Then I learned about mason bees—native, solitary, sloppy pollinators that doubled my blueberry yield with nothing more than a cedar box and some paper tubes.
Callie RiversMarch 13, 2026
Hot Composting in March: Build a Pile That Cooks in 6 Weeks
A well-managed hot pile started in mid-March gives you finished compost by late April. Here's how I build one in an afternoon — ratio, layers, timeline, and the Asheville coffee shop cheat code.
Callie RiversMarch 13, 2026
Bareroot Season in Asheville: Why March Is Your $50 Discount on Quality Trees
Bareroot tree season in Asheville closes around mid-March—and it's the only window where you can get quality native and fruit trees for $25–60 instead of $80–200. Here's how a former landscape designer thinks about this annual window.
Callie RiversMarch 6, 2026
March Seed Starting in Asheville: When to Sow Indoors (And When to Just Direct Sow)
Asheville's April 15-30 frost window means your seed-starting math is different from the generic packet instructions — here's how to calculate your actual indoor start dates, which seeds need the head start, and which ones you're wasting time on.
Callie RiversMarch 5, 2026
Soil Testing: The Spring Task Everyone Skips (And Why Your Garden Fails for It)
Don't spend another dollar on plants or amendments until you know what your soil actually needs. Here's how to test, what the numbers mean, and the one result that changes everything.
Callie RiversMarch 5, 2026International Women's Day in Asheville: Women in Gardening Are Growing Community
Celebrate International Women's Day by supporting women in gardening in Asheville, where community gardens are growing food access, beauty, and belonging.
Callie RiversMarch 4, 2026Asheville Spring Salad Garden: Harvest Before Last Frost
Build an Asheville spring salad garden that looks beautiful and feeds you before last frost, using cold-tolerant greens, mulch, and simple row-cover protection.
Callie RiversMarch 3, 2026