Planning Mode (and a recipe)
By Christina GreenHouse17 We’re approaching the end of January, how did that happen? We’ve been hard at work planning for the 2017 garden season: completing seed orders, purchasing equipment, finalizing
By Christina GreenHouse17 We’re approaching the end of January, how did that happen? We’ve been hard at work planning for the 2017 garden season: completing seed orders, purchasing equipment, finalizing
Ah, the holiday season: The sound of family and friends gathered in your home, the excitement of giving and receiving gifts, overly-catchy Christmas music playing at every turn, dropping temperatures
Happy Friday Grow Appalachians! Holly the happy HQer...and I guess it's been a little while. Is it really mid-August? I'm kind of just at a loss here. And also holding
We've covered tomatoes this summer, and now for this week's edition of the Grow Appalachia newsletter, we'll be taking a look at another popular garden favorite: corn! Corn has become
One of the most beloved vegetables in the garden, the tomato, has become a staple in the home garden for many years. Whether it's because of its versatility, flavor, stability,
Happy Fall Y'all from Lori and crew in lovely McDowell County, West Virginia. As a follow up to my last blog, the frost snuck up on us and wiped out
Good Day to everyone. This is Gail Mills, the Project Coordinator for the Grow Appalachia Garden Program at Project Worth in Menifee County, Kentucky. As we enter the home stretch
Hello everyone, I hope all is well. My name is Alex Sanders and I am the Grow Appalachia Garden Site Supervisor at Project Worth Outreach located in Menifee County in
Happy Saturday! Lori here, and this week we have a tasty recipe that one of our participants made for us to try. She harvested a bunch of acorn squash this
If your gardens are like those in Mingo County right now … Then you must be experiencing an overload of zucchinis and yellow squash. Last year, we had a similar