
Growing Greener
Tom Christopher
Show overview
Growing Greener has been publishing since 2019, and across the 7 years since has built a catalogue of 357 episodes. That works out to roughly 170 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Leisure show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed yesterday, with 19 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Tom Christopher.
From the publisher
Your weekly half-hour program about environmentally informed gardening. Each week we bring you a different expert, a leading voice on gardening in partnership with Nature. Our goal is to make your landscape healthier, more beautiful, more sustainable, and more fun.
Latest Episodes
View all 357 episodesA New Chapter in the Roundup Debacle
Landraces – Customizing Vegetable and Fruit Cultivars to Flourish in Your Garden
Are Alien Plants Superior at Supporting Insect Diversity in the Garden?
The Million Orchid Project Turns Urban Areas into Sanctuaries for Critically Endangered Native Species
Maine's Wild Seed Project Offers Education and an Example of Nationwide Significance
Chemical Warfare from Invasive Plants
Ep 356Using Genetics to Avoid Spraying in the Vegetable Garden
Selecting disease-resistant cultivars is an essential tool for avoiding the use of pesticides in the vegetable garden. Plant pathologist Nicole Gauthier of the University of Kentucky explains how to identify cultivars appropriate to your region and your garden, and why "tolerance" may serve you as well as "resistance."
Ep 355Make Your Lawn a Low-Maintenance Contributor to Biodiversity and Landscape Beauty
As Dan Jaffe Wilder Wilder says "you can grow a lawn which is a whole bunch of green stuff. Or you can grow a lawn that is a whole bunch of low-growing green stuff with some yellow, some blue, some white, some pink and some red mixed in. Which do you choose? " Join the conversation with this native plant expert and learn how you can make your lawn not only colorful but also easier to maintain and supportive of the local wildlife and native flora.
Ep 354A Gardener's Introduction to Fungi and Their Essential Support for Plants
Estimates of fungi diversity range into the millions of species, yet the vast majority remain unknown. What is clear, says mycologist Gabriela D'Elia, is that your garden plants depend on the services provided to them by the indigenous fungi.
Ep 353A Brazilian Genius of the last Century Created Invaluable Lessons for Today's Ecological Gardeners
James Lord speaks of his mentor and inspiration Roberto Burle Marx, the painter, sculptor, musician, and botanist who found in Brazil's native plants the basis for a new style of landscape architecture and a language to celebrate the distinctive beauty of his homeland.
Ep 352A British Horticultural Ecologist Challenges the U.S. Consensus
Citing European studies, British horticultural ecologist James Hitchmough, a leader of the ecological gardening movement in his country, rejects the intrinsic superiority of native plants over exotic garden imports for supporting insect diversity in the garden.
Ep 351Balancing your account in the soil seed bank
A square foot of topsoil typically hosts thousands of dormant seeds deposited by previous floras. Nathan Lambstrom of Lambstrom Garden Ecology discusses his research into how this "soil seed bank" can enhance or derail ecological restoration, and how to manage your "account" to benefit your garden.
Ep 350A Tree's Perspective on Pruning
Is your pruning aimed only at gratifying your aesthetics and needs? Chris Roddick also views pruning from the plants' perspective, promoting techniques that enhance their growth patterns and ecological function as well.
Ep 349O Canada ¬– A Garden Activist Enriches and Beautifies Lawns with Local Prairie Flora
Travel with Growing Greener to Winnipeg, Manitoba to learn how Ash Burkowski is collecting seed from local prairie remnants to raise indigenous grasses and wildflowers that can be integrated into lawns, restoring populations of native flora while relieving homeowners of the need for fertilization and irrigation and reducing the need for mowing.
Ep 348Creating Crops that Thrive in Your Garden
A replay of a February 2024 conversation in which Joseph Lofthouse, author of "Landrace Gardening" details how anyone can create genetically diverse vegetable and fruit crops that flourish in the local climate and soil with minimal inputs in just three years.
Ep 437Colorado Agrivoltaic Learning Center combines energy generation with agriculture for a double harvest
Byron Kominek knew the family farm needed a more profitable crop than hay to survive. By installing photovoltaic panels and growing crops underneath, he now supplies electricity to 300 neighboring houses while also producing food and hosting educational programs at what is now a popular learning center.
Ep 346The Missing Piece of Your Ecological Garden
Liz Koziol of the University of Kansas shares hew work with mycorrhizal fungi and native plants, and how a properly designed fungal inoculant can make your ecological garden more biodiverse, quicker to establish itself and more resistant to weeds.
Ep 345An Antique Tool Brings New Knowledge of Native Plants
Herbariums, annotated collections of dried plant specimens first appeared in Italy almost 500 years ago. In today's Growing Greener, Lea Johnson, Director of Conservation at the Native Plant Trust discusses why they remain an essential tool for those who track and study native plant populations, and the new technologies herbariums facilitate.
Ep 344How Your Garden Helped Drive the Deer Population Boom
Dr. Elic Weitzel of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History describes the thousands of years of association between deer and people, how they long ago came to prefer human-created landscapes, and why their population has exploded
Ep 343Behold the Magic of Warm-Season Grasses
In a conversation recorded in December of 2019 Shannon Currey, a leading educator in the native plants industry, describes how the unique adaptations of warm season grasses make them winners in an era of climate change as well as invaluable in the late summer garden.