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Charlie Nardozzi answers gardeners' questions and gives advice on how to get their gardens and tools ready for overwintering and storage.
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There are several different kinds of holiday cactuses: There's a Thanksgiving cactus, Christmas cactus and an Easter cactus. Holiday cactuses earn their names because they tend to bloom near Christian holidays.
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You can plant crocus, daffodils and tulips outdoors now, as the soil is cool enough for them to overwinter and bloom next spring. And you can also plant bulbs in containers indoors. Use a layering technique and they will blossom for a month.
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Love to use garlic in cooking? Consider planting your own. You can choose garlic types based on your taste. Then, as long as you've got composted and well-drained soil, you should get a good garlic harvest next summer.
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Sometimes blooming up until 鈥� and even after 鈥� the first frost, flowers like Montauk daisies and stokesia provide a last gasp of late fall color.
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The All Things Gardening host shares tips for readying your garden for the winter.
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The Vermont gardening season is often too wet or too dry, and it is always too short. We love it anyway.
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If your daffodils and other flowering bulbs didn't grow well this past spring, try planting flowering onions. They are beautiful and fairly trouble-free. Purchase a few when you're getting other spring flowering bulbs ready to plant later this month.
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Brave Little StateA question from two frustrated gardeners in Pomfret: 鈥淲hat invasive species has done the most damage to Vermont鈥檚 ecosystem?鈥�
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Paw paw trees grow in our region and produce lots of sweet fruits in late summer and early fall. The fruit's insides are soft and custard-like, and the taste can range from banana to mango to vanilla.