PLANT HARDINESS ZONES
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New USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Maps Show Plant Comfort ZonesThe new USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Maps offer gardeners guidance in choosing varieties and scheduling planting. How do the new maps impact your gardening plans?
Gardening Tips for USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 5Learn the characteristics of gardening in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 5, as well as what plants thrive there. Links to zone 5 and frost maps, as well as lists of plants, are included.- Where to Get Free Vegetable Gardening Tips & Plant Hardiness ZonesDon't know your plant's hardiness zone? Learn where to find this information, and other free gardening advice.
- USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 3 Fruit TreesZone three is located in northernmost regions of the country, and features a minimum temperature ranging from negative-30-degrees Fahrenheit to negative-40-degrees Fahrenheit.
- Plant Hardiness Zone Maps: A GuideThe USDA plant hardiness zone map is easy to read, and provides an excellent guide for gardeners, farmers, and landscapers.
Where and How to Plant Bearded IrisesEasy tips on where and how to plant Bearded Irises in your home garden.- Gardening Guide for USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 9I'm here to help you understand how to grow plants in an American hardiness zone known as Zone 9.
Small Shrubs You Can Grow in Zones 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8Using shrubs of varying heights can add interest to your home landscaping. Small shrubs options include those that attract butterflies, provide fragrance, are low maintenance and/or provide year-round color.- How Reliable Are the USDA Hardiness Zones?Hardiness zones play a big part in deciding which plants to choose, but make sure it is the current one.
USDA Hardiness Planting Zones for CanadaThe U.S. Department of Agriculture developed a map of the average annual minimum temperatures across Canada. The map can be used as an aide in deciding what trees, flowers and shrubs can survive through winter.- Increasing the Winter Hardiness of PlantsMost gardeners are familiar with their particular growing zone, but few realize that with a few tricks they can increase it to grow unusual and exotic plants.
- Gardening with the Cigar Flower Plant (Cuphea Ignea)Cuphea ignea, the Cigar Flower plant, also known as the Firecracker plant, is a great addition to any garden or border area, flowering all summer long.
How to Find Your Growing ZoneWhy do you need to know your growing zone? This information is vital to selecting the right plants for your garden. Here is information on what the plant hardiness zones mean and some links to the U.S. zone map.- Gardening: Knowing when to PlantBefore you spend your limited resources buying bushes, plants or trees for planting in your yard or garden, read this article to learn how to find out what you should plant and where you should plant it.
- Planting and Growing the Rice Paper PlantA look at the large-leaved Rice Paper Plant ad how to grow it.
When and How to Plant Potatoes by Your Hardiness ZoneNothing can compare to the taste of homegrown vegetables. Planting potatoes is easy when you know your USDA hardiness zone.
Plant Selection Depends on Knowing Your Gardening ZoneKnow your gardening zone to ensure you make the best plant selections for your garden. Work with nature and not against it.
Growing a Biblical Plant GardenA few good selections to put in a Biblical Plant Garden that will also provide use in the household.- How to Plant a Hen and Chicks PlantThis article describes how to propagate Sempervivum tectorum by division. This plant is commonly known as a hen and chicks plant.
- Five Tips for Proper Papyrus Plant CareAncient Egyptians used to use the Papyrus plant as a writing medium. If you have a backyard pond, this shallow water plant would make a great addition. This article will give you a few tips to grow one.
- An Overview of Growing ZonesGrowing zones are simply regions on a map that designate the average yearly lowest temperature. This is relevant to gardening, because different plants cannot survive below certain temperatures, so you know not to plant them in those growing zones.
- Hardiness Zone 9 is Great for Tropical PlantsHardiness Zone 9 has two seasons: wet and dry.
- Gardening Guide for USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 4Zone 4 is a glacial area that has hard winters. These glaciers left behind very rich soil that is good for growing most plants.
- Garden Plants for USDA Hardiness Zone 3 and the Upper Part of the Lower 48Hardiness Zone 3 includes the northernmost parts of Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
- Hardiness Zone 2 Planting Guide for Coastal Alaska and Northern CanadaAlpine plants that survive winter and come out for short summers do well in Hardiness Zone 2. Most of these plants also provide food for wildlife.
- Physical Factors that Can Produce Plant DamagePlant damage can be caused by non-living factors such as physical (environmental), mechanical, or chemical. Of these three, physical factors involve the plant being exposed to extremes such as temperature, oxygen, moisture, and light.
- Guide to Hardiness Zone 4: Finally Some WarmthZone 4 can still have some harsh winters but at least there's more sun and more warmth for more varied plants in your garden.
- Gardening and Plants for USDA Hardiness Zone 1: Interior AlaskaPerhaps the most formidable zone for gardening, Alaska does have beautiful plants to add to your yard.
- Your Plant/Gardening Questions Answered HereI have over 15 years experience in Horticulture
Spring Gardening in Northeast IndianaGardening in a zone five garden is enjoyable and very rewarding. The varying temperatures in northeast Indiana enable gardeners to plant a broad range of vegetables, fruits, plants, and flowers.
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