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Growing Greener

Growing Greener

357 episodes — Page 1 of 8

A New Chapter in the Roundup Debacle

May 13, 202629 min

Landraces – Customizing Vegetable and Fruit Cultivars to Flourish in Your Garden

May 6, 202629 min

Are Alien Plants Superior at Supporting Insect Diversity in the Garden?

Apr 29, 202629 min

The Million Orchid Project Turns Urban Areas into Sanctuaries for Critically Endangered Native Species

Apr 22, 202629 min

Maine's Wild Seed Project Offers Education and an Example of Nationwide Significance

Apr 15, 202629 min

Chemical Warfare from Invasive Plants

Apr 8, 202629 min

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."

Apr 1, 202629 min

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.

Mar 25, 202629 min

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.

Mar 17, 202629 min

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.

Mar 11, 202629 min

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.

Mar 4, 202629 min

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.

Feb 25, 202629 min

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.

Feb 18, 202629 min

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.

Feb 11, 202629 min

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.

Feb 4, 202629 min

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.

Jan 28, 202629 min

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.

Jan 21, 202629 min

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.

Jan 14, 202629 min

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

Jan 7, 202629 min

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.

Dec 31, 202529 min

Ep 342How Vermont sculptor Dan Snow has elevated the traditional New England wall into a powerful, locally rooted art form

In a conversation from January of 2021, Dan Snow tells how, using locally sourced stone, he expresses the intrinsic beauty of a site in bold constructions held together only by gravity, friction, and history.

Dec 24, 202529 min

Ep 341Partnering with Goats to Maintain Biodiversity in Ecological Hotspot

Goats love invasive plants, says Elijah Goodwin, Director of Ecosystem Monitoring at New York's Stone Barns Center; and with careful timing and regulation the Center's herd is restoring ecological balance to its 80-acre campus and hundreds of acres of a famous nature preserve.

Dec 17, 202529 min

Ep 340Seemingly non-invasive exotic garden plants can be ecological time bombs

Revisiting a conversation from August 2023 with Dr. Bethany Bradley of the University of Massachusetts, who describes how plants introduced from outside our ecosystems may remain quiescent for decades before turning invasive, and how climate change is threatening to explode this threat.

Dec 10, 202529 min

Ep 339Snagged: How a Dead Tree Can Enrich Your Garden

Wildlife biologist Ken Bevis discusses the many benefits to biodiversity of "snags," standing dead trees, and how to incorporate them safely and aesthetically into our gardens.

Dec 3, 202529 min

Ep 338Celebrate Thanksgiving with Pawpaws – a North American native fruit ideal for the home gardener

In a replay of a conversation from September of 2023, Sheri Crabtree of Kentucky State University describes the northernmost species of the tropical custard apple family, the pawpaw, which offers delicious tropical flavor, a creamy texture, and thrives in the backyard garden as far north as USDA Zone 5.

Nov 26, 202529 min

Ep 337Start from Seed for a Special Relationship with Your Native Plants

William Cullina, a leading expert on the propagation of native plants, describes the special insights about a species' adaptations and ecology that starting from seed provides, and offers simple tips for success with this endeavor.

Nov 19, 202529 min

Ep 336Coexistence with a garden nemesis

'Good fences make good neighbors,' especially, according to Vermonter Susan Shea, when it comes to gardeners and woodchucks. A nature writer and photographer, Shea details the extraordinary abilities of this native mammal, the important ecological and cultural roles it plays, and how to install a woodchuck-proof fence.

Nov 12, 202529 min

Ep 335Edwina von Gal Closes the Loop

Everything that grows on your property – its "biomass" – should remain there even after death, says this award-winning garden designer and founder of the Perfect Earth Project. Fallen branches, leaves, even tree trunks as they decay reactivate a cycle essential to Nature's health, and are an opportunity for a different kind of beauty.

Nov 5, 202529 min

Ep 334Pollinators of the Night

Overlooked by many gardeners, moths are actually more efficient as pollinators than bees and are the basis of the food chain for everything from bats and songbirds to grizzly bears

Oct 29, 202529 min

Ep 333Reading the Wildlife Stories in Your Garden

Expert tracker Jason Knight shares how to develop the ability to read animal tracks and signs to keep current with wildlife visits and to resolve wildlife problems peacefully and effectively.

Oct 22, 202529 min

Ep 332A Garden Masterpiece Designed to Evolve

Richard Hayden, senior director of horticulture for the High Line, describes how plants and gardeners collaborate in this ever-changing urban paradise

Oct 15, 202529 min

Ep 331Converting Landscape Professionals to Environmental Activists

Beth Ginter, executive Director of the Chesapeake Conservation Landscaping Council, describes her organization's successful program to enlist an often-resistant profession as advocates for environmental activism.

Oct 8, 202529 min

Ep 330Fighting Climate Change from the Bottom Up

How Village and Wilderness fosters diverse local solutions to a global problem

Oct 1, 202529 min

Ep 329Second Chance Composting

John Pitroff chose composting when his daughter's birth sparked dreams of leaving her a better world – and now he's addressing environmental problems while making a living helping local gardeners and farmers.

Sep 24, 202529 min

Ep 328How We Created Weeds and Why We Need Them

Peter Del Tredici, Senior Research Scientist Emeritus of Arnold Arboretum and Visiting Lecturer of Applied Ecology and Planning at MIT explains the history of these garden pests why they can play an essential role in this era of climate change.

Sep 17, 202529 min

Ep 327Texan Pam Penick Shares Ideas for Integrating Native Plants into Traditional Gardens in Beautiful New Book

An accomplished and progressive garden designer, Pam Penick, author of "Gardens of Texas," shares ideas for ideas for using native plants in traditional and formal gardens garnered from her reporting on private landscapes of the Lone Star State

Sep 10, 202529 min

Ep 326Finding Hope in Ecological Gardening

Leader of the Ecological Gardening movement Rebecca McMackin shares reasons why in a time of discouragement, gardening can restore optimism.

Sep 3, 202529 min

Ep 325This Year's "Less Lawn More Life Challenge" Goes Viral

Last May Growing Greener featured the challenge that Plan it Wild, a rewilding design and installation firm, posed to American homeowners: to replace 25 square feet of lawn with locally indigenous plants. Today we hear how nearly 10,000 people in 49 states committed to this 12-week online program, how backyard biodiversity flourished as a result, and how the challenge is expanding through neighborhoods to reach people who hadn't previously considered devoting their landscapes to reinforcing the regional ecosystem.

Aug 27, 202529 min

Ep 324America's most beautiful neglected genus of keystone plants

Nancy DuBrule-Clemente, a pioneer of organic land care, extolls the outstanding aesthetic and ecological contributions of goldenrods, a genus of native flowers too seldom seen in our gardens.

Aug 20, 202529 min

Ep 323The Path from Traditional Horticulture to Ecological Gardening – Part Two

Edwina Von Gal, founder and president of the Perfect Earth Project, completes her interview of Growing Greener host, Tom Christopher, exploring his path to ecological gardening, the hope he finds in the remarkable contributions of young colleagues, and the most effective ways to reach out to the broader gardening public.

Aug 13, 202529 min

Ep 322The Path from Traditional Horticulture to Ecological Gardening – Part One

Edwina Von Gal, founder and president of the Perfect Earth Project, interviews Growing Greener host, Tom Christopher, about what led him from an education steeped in traditional gardening to helping found ecological gardening in the United States

Aug 6, 202529 min

Ep 321A Female-Owned and Operated Gardening Cooperative Creates a New Business Model With Nature as "our foremost collaborator"

Andrea Hurd of Oakland, California describes the way she structured Mariposa Gardening and Design Cooperative, Inc. to provide employee equitability and management experience for women breaking into the field, and the firm's commitment to celebrating the local landscape by enhancing habitat and working with indigenous materials.

Jul 30, 202529 min

Ep 320Finding Opportunity in a Common Landscape Roadblock

Switching to more environmentally friendly practices is too often resisted by landscape professionals afraid to stray from familiar routines. Mariah Whitmore and Tony Piazza, both prominent landscape business owners in the eastern end of Long Island, New York, discuss how they are increasing profits by adding Nature friendly land care to their repertoire.

Jul 23, 202529 min

Ep 319A Game-Changing Shortcut to Creating a Native Meadow

Claire Chambers, founder of Meadow Lab, describes the roll-out sod her company is producing that can transform a landscape into a blooming, mature meadow of native flowers and grasses in a single growing season

Jul 16, 202529 min

Ep 318The Overlooked Beauty and Garden Services of Wasps

A replay of a conversation from April of 2021 with Pollinator Conservationist Heather Holm about her multi-award-winning book, Wasps, Their Biology, Diversity, and Role as Beneficial Insects and Pollinators of Native Plants.

Jul 9, 202529 min

Ep 317A New Guide for Helping Your Native Plant Garden Adapt to a Changing Climate

Jenica Allen and Matt Fertakos of Northeast RISCC describe the invaluable free online guide they helped to create that provides all a gardener needs to know about selecting native plants that will flourish not only today but also persist as the local climate changes

Jul 2, 202529 min

Ep 316Pee-Cycling: Taking the Waste Out of Our Waterways by Fertilizing the Garden

Julia Cavicchi and Tatiana Schreiber of the Rich Earth Institute talk of curbing water pollution by removing human urine from the waste stream, and how you can repurpose it to feed your plants

Jun 25, 202529 min

Ep 315Steppe Gardening in Colorado

Michael Bone, Curator of the Steppe Collection at Denver Botanic Gardens, relates Denver's native flora to similar grasslands around the world and explains how this knowledge can inspire and enrich the local gardening.

Jun 18, 202529 min

Ep 314Ecologist and Author Tom Wessels Talks Coevolution

Understanding this concept provides the foundation for creating a high functioning, stable, and resilient landscape – anywhere you garden

Jun 11, 202529 min

Ep 313A Devastated Arboretum Embraces the Catastrophe

When a freak tornado swept through Ambler Arboretum, the staff and university administration took the opportunity to turn its recovery into an exploration of natural resilience in the face of climate change

Jun 4, 202529 min