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2024 Home Gardening by GardenersNet.Com
How to Grow Just About Anything
How to Grow Spectacular Home Gardens in 2024 is Our Mission
Our mission is to provide you with the finest quality home gardening “How to Grow” information for growing plants, gardening tips, and trivia. So, we’ve got you covered for growing all of your favorite plants. As a matter of fact, our guide sheets cover everything from seed starting to growing plants, harvesting, storing, and eating the flowers, fruits, herbs, and vegetables of your labor. And, we strive to provide you with the information you need, when you need it, to grow the best plants you can grow!
All of us at The Gardener’s Network, wish you a very happy, and blessed Thanksgiving!
Exciting Home Gardening Times
Fresh, crisp apples are a sweet Autumn treat.
Bob Matthews
Gardeners Net Owner
The Gardener's Network is the perfect place for you and your plants, the perfect source on how to grow:
- Almost Any Plant
- Flowers & Bulbs
- Fruit
- Herbs
- Trees and Shrubs
- Vegetables
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The outdoor gardening season comes to an end this month. We turn indoors to cooking and baking with the now-harvested fruits of our labor. And, we enjoy home gardening with houseplants.
Home Gardeng Encyclopedia
We strive to provide the most in-depth how-to-grow guide sheets to help you to grow better plants. Regardless of your experience level, you can learn a few tips and techniques for growing better vegetables, flowers, and herbs. Our guides will help you have the best garden you can grow in 2024.
Composting is an activity that can be practiced all year long. Fall yard clean-up produces plenty of leaves and other compostable material. Also, continue to diligently collect kitchen scraps to put into your compost heap or composter.
Avid Gardeners Turn To...
The Thanksgiving feast is filled with the fruits of your labor. Cranberries, squash, and other vegetables is on the list of “Must have” sides. After all, they are a tradition.
Roasting your first Turkey this Thanksgiving. We’ve got you covered with “How to’s” and plenty of recipes.
Falling leaves are great compost.
Leaves enrich the soil.
Chances are you have ample amounts of fall leaves. Don’t put them to the curb. Rather, rake them up and work them into your garden soil. Your 2024 garden plants will thank you next year.
November's Featured Plants and Garden Articles
Colorful and Hardy Chrysanthemums
Hardy Chrysanthemums, fondly called “Mums”, are the last blooms of Fall. And, the blooms are long-lasting, too. The plant’s flowers shine brightly in a variety of fall colors long after the first frost. At this time of year, you find them everywhere, indoors and out.
Did You Know: Chrysanthemums are the second most popular. Roses are the most popular.
Garden All Winter Long with Houseplants
Back to Houseplants
The outdoor gardening season flies by all too quickly. As cold weather begins to arrive, we turn our attention to indoor houseplants. First up, think about the outdoor plants you may want to bring indoors for the winter. Acclimate them slowly to less light. This helps to avoid plant leaf drop.
Next, check over all of your indoor plants. Chances are, they haven't received a lot of your attention during the summer. Do they need a trim? When was the last time you fertilized them? Now is the perfect time to give all of your indoor plants an application of houseplant fertilizer. It helps to keep them healthy.
Saving Seeds for Next Year
As the end of your gardening season arrives, you look back upon all the beautiful flowers and productive vegetable plants that you grew this year. You’d like to save some of the seeds from your favorite plants to grow next year. No problem!
Savings seeds for planting next year is very common. And it’s easy to do. First, you need to properly collect mature seeds. Then, they need to be cleaned and dried. Finally, the last step is to label them and properly store them so they will be viable at planting time next year.
More on Saving Seeds for Next Year
Indoor Herb Gardens
Would you like to grow something indoors that you can eat!? Several herbs are excellent choices. They can thrive indoors with less light and lower humidity. Select herbs that are low-growing, as they will fit in flowerpots and other containers. Three of these herbs are chives, basil, and oregano.
After selecting the herbs you want to grow, plant seeds or transplants into a small flowerpot that you can move around. Then, place them in or near the sunniest window in your home. Then if they need a little more sunlight. move them from one sunny window to another as needed. Harvest them as needed, just before you need to use them.
Today's Deep Thought:
"Sow generously and you will reap generously."
Celebrate Your Gardening Hobby
In fact, there are many days to celebrate our hobby. Among them:
Send a free Ecard to a friend or family member for just about any event.
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We hope you enjoy your visit to our website and come back often. And, tell your gardening friends, too!
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