Learn tips to eliminate and manage butterfly weed that has overrun your garden. Discover strategies to regain control and restore your garden's beauty.
Monarchs are becoming extinct, and the Tennessee Department of Transportation is giving away milkweed seeds to replenish the dwindling monarch population. Butterfly enthusiasts are contributing to the ...
and never plant in waterlogged or frozen soil. In the first spring, the shrubs should be cut down to 45–60cm above the ground to encourage them to ‘bush out’, creating a nice thick hedge. During the ...
Commenters identified the plant as bishop's weed, an invasive species from Asia. "You now see [bishop's weed] everywhere in the forest because people throw them in the forest … get rid of them," one ...
One thing Americans who love monarchs can do is plant ... is not a weed but a wildflower, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service. Designating of the migratory monarch butterfly as threatened ...
Tribune Happy New Year! My New Year’s wish is for nice, slow, soaking rainfalls to help our new plants establish and our established plants thrive. What’s your garden ...