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Adventure Notes from Green Gardens, shaped by its Garden & Outdoor focus.
Latest Posts
View all →The Monarch's Last Stand: Why Your Garden Needs Milkweed Right Now (And It's Not Too Late)
Monarch butterfly populations have crashed by 80% in the last two decades. The culprit? A shortage of native milkweed. Here's how your garden can become a critical rest stop on their 3,000-mile migration.
Callie RiversFebruary 27, 2026Lemonading Your Garden: Why Your "Failures" Are Your Best Design Features
The 2026 gardening trend everyone's talking about? It's just radical acceptance in a raised bed. Here's how I turned my garden's biggest "mistakes" into its most beautiful corners.
Callie RiversFebruary 26, 2026
The Soft Awakening: Why Early Spring Pests Are Your Garden's Wake-Up Call (Not a Disaster)
Early spring pests aren't a crisis—they're your garden's wake-up call. Learn why a hose blast, healthy soil, and patience are all you need to handle aphids, spider mites, and scale insects the natural way.
Callie RiversFebruary 25, 2026The February Pause: Why Doing Nothing Is Your Biggest Garden Superpower
February is the permission month—when doing nothing is your biggest garden superpower. Here's why waiting (and listening) matters more than rushing.
Callie RiversFebruary 25, 2026The Soil Thermometer Moment: Why Late February Is Your Secret Garden Weapon
Late February is the secret gardening window in Zone 7. The soil is waking up, cool-season crops are ready to plant, and you're not too late. Here's exactly what to do right now.
Callie RiversFebruary 24, 2026The February Felco Session: Why Your Fruit Trees Are Begging for a Haircut Right Now
Late February is the Goldilocks zone for fruit tree pruning—your trees are dormant but ready to wake. Learn the difference between open center and central leader pruning, the "three Ds" method, and how to make clean cuts that heal fast.
Callie RiversFebruary 23, 2026
The Empty Bed Lie: Why Your 'Between Seasons' Garden Should Never Actually Be Empty
Why your garden should never actually rest between seasons—and how succession planting can give you 40-60% more harvest from the same space.
Callie RiversFebruary 23, 2026