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DIY Gardening

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89 contributions to DIY Gardening
ðŸŒļ Want Your Garden to be a Pollinator Hotspot?
If you want more melons, squash, and cucumbers this year, the secret isn't just soil and sun. It's flowers. ðŸŒŧ Here's a good rule of thumb I use in my own garden: for every 3 vegetable plants, plant at least 1 flower. Some veggies rely on pollinators to produce fruit. But veggie blooms alone often aren't enough to catch their attention, especially early in the season before your vegetables even start flowering. Think of flowers as the billboard. Their bright colors and strong scent are basically advertising "food here!" to any pollinator flying by. Once they land in your garden for the flowers, they'll naturally visit your vegetable blooms too. 𝗗ð—ķð—ģð—ģð—ēð—ŋð—ēð—ŧ𝘁 𝗙ð—đ𝗞𝘄ð—ēð—ŋ𝘀, 𝗗ð—ķð—ģð—ģð—ēð—ŋð—ēð—ŧ𝘁 ð—Đð—ķ𝘀ð—ķ𝘁𝗞ð—ŋ𝘀 Not all pollinators are drawn to the same things, so a mix of flowers brings a mix of helpers: 🐝 Bees love purple, blue, and yellow flowers like lavender, bee balm, hyssop, and sunflowers ðŸĶ‹ Butterflies go for clustered or flat, open blooms in red, orange, and pink, like zinnias, lantana, and coneflowers, because they give them a place to land ðŸĶ Hummingbirds are drawn to tubular, red or orange flowers like salvia, California fuchsia, and trumpet vine 🌙 Moths prefer pale or white flowers that open in the evening, like moonflower or evening primrose, since they're active at night Planting a variety means you're rolling out the welcome mat for more than just bees. 𝗗𝗞ð—ŧ'𝘁 𝗙𝗞ð—ŋð—īð—ē𝘁 𝘁ð—ĩð—ē 𝗊ð—Ū𝘁ð—ēð—ŋ Pollinators need water just like we do, and having a source right in your garden makes a huge difference. A bird bath or small fountain works great. If there's no water nearby, pollinators have to leave your garden to find some elsewhere, which means less time pollinating your plants. But if you've got water right there, they can take a quick drink, rest for a second, and get right back to work. However, bees and other small pollinators can actually drown in open water. So, toss a few flat stones, rocks, marbles, or corks into the bird bath or fountain so they have something to land on while they drink. A shallow dish with pebbles works just as well if you don't have a bird bath.
ðŸŒļ Want Your Garden to be a Pollinator Hotspot?
3 likes â€Ē 22h
Here are some of mine
First tomatoes grown from seed ever
Not a big harvest, but I am still a proud Mama of my tomatoes. The fact that I could grow them from seed amazed me. This is the girl who has killed a snake plant, an aloe Vera, and even a cactus.
First tomatoes grown from seed ever
🧅 When to Harvest & How to Cure Onions
I have good news: Onions are one of the easiest plants in the garden to read. Unlike other plants (I see you, watermelon 🍉), where it can be a lot harder to tell, onions basically ð˜ĩð˜Ķ𝘭𝘭 you when they're ready. ðŸŊ 𝘀ð—ķð—īð—ŧ𝘀 𝘁𝗞 ð—đ𝗞𝗞ð—ļ ð—ģ𝗞ð—ŋ: - Your first big clue is when the neck (that's the part where the leaves meet the top of the bulb) flops over onto the ground. - Your second sign is when the outer skin starts turning dry and papery instead of smooth and green. - The third indication is when about half the leaves start yellowing and drying out. BUT WAIT (there's more ðŸĪĢ), don't rush to pull them just yet. 𝗊ð—Ūð—ķ𝘁 ð—Ŋð—ēð—ģ𝗞ð—ŋð—ē 𝘆𝗞𝘂 ð—ĩð—Ūð—ŋ𝘃ð—ē𝘀𝘁 Once the tops flop and start browning, give it another one to two weeks before you pull anything. This does two things: - It lets the onion finish sealing its neck shut, which is what keeps moisture and bacteria out during storage - And it lets the bulb pull the last bit of energy out of the dying stalk. Skip this wait, and you could end up with onions that don't seal properly and rot faster in storage. 𝗛𝗞𝘄 𝘁𝗞 ð—ĩð—Ūð—ŋ𝘃ð—ē𝘀𝘁 𝘁ð—ĩð—ē𝗚 - Stop watering three to five days before you plan to harvest. This gives the outer layers and the soil around the bulb time to dry out, which matters a lot for both pulling them easily and preventing them from trapping excess moisture. - Wait for a dry day if you can. Onions have shallow roots, so on dry soil you can just grab the bulb and gently pull straight up. Wet soil makes them harder to pull, and extra soil can stick to the bulb, which traps moisture you don't want. A couple things to keep in mind: - Pull from the bulb, not the stem. Yanking on the stem can snap it. - Once it's out, gently brush off the dirt with your hand. - Don't peel off any of the outer papery layers yet. Those are doing a job (protecting the bulb), and you'll want them for curing. 𝗛𝗞𝘄 𝘁𝗞 𝗰𝘂ð—ŋð—ē 𝘁ð—ĩð—ē𝗚 If you're planning to store your onions rather than eat them right away, they need to cure first. Lay them out in a single layer somewhere shaded with good airflow, out of direct sun. A covered patio, garage, or shop all work fine.
🧅 When to Harvest & How to Cure Onions
2 likes â€Ē 3d
Like the drying rack
6 likes â€Ē 15d
I use chat GPT
Goodbye my lovely basil tree
It was a sad day in the garden. I had to chop down the overgrown basil tree. I couldn’t give it a haircut as I wanted to because I have been sick. I looked at it this morning and it decided for me that it had to go. So sinus infection or not, there I was with my Spotify playlist, trimmers, buckets, and sun hat apologizing to the basil plant and the bees. It took 3 hours to find all the good basil to save.
Goodbye my lovely basil tree
2 likes â€Ē Jun 10
Unfortunately I don’t have the energy to make the pesto so it will all be dried.
1 like â€Ē 15d
I have a second basil tree and in my yard I had to give a haircut to today (5 hours of harvesting= 14 cups of basil). The third pic is after the haircut. Tomorrow’s task: make pesto.
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@kimberly-ward-2257
I just started my plant collection. Looking for good places that have zone 10 plants that would survive a beginner ðŸĪŠ and love to continue learning

Active 4h ago
Joined Feb 17, 2026
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