
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It’s easy to get excited about the first tulip or even the first dandelion in the yard (OK—that might be a stretch). But what about those plants that don’t get all the love and attention, yet still brighten up those first few months of the gardening season? Today we’re honoring those unsung heroes of the spring garden—plants that need a better PR agent because they’re marvelous, but not very well-known. We’ve got a few native dark horses and even a shrub that Steve thought he’d never like. To get you really laughing we revisit some childhood memories of using spring plants in mischievous ways. Finally, we debut a new segment where we give a brief look into what’s going on (good, bad, and ugly) in our gardens right now.
Expert testimony: Bill Cullina is the executive director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Morris Arboretum.
By Fine Gardening Magazine4.5
393393 ratings
It’s easy to get excited about the first tulip or even the first dandelion in the yard (OK—that might be a stretch). But what about those plants that don’t get all the love and attention, yet still brighten up those first few months of the gardening season? Today we’re honoring those unsung heroes of the spring garden—plants that need a better PR agent because they’re marvelous, but not very well-known. We’ve got a few native dark horses and even a shrub that Steve thought he’d never like. To get you really laughing we revisit some childhood memories of using spring plants in mischievous ways. Finally, we debut a new segment where we give a brief look into what’s going on (good, bad, and ugly) in our gardens right now.
Expert testimony: Bill Cullina is the executive director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Morris Arboretum.

103 Listeners

253 Listeners

682 Listeners

357 Listeners

803 Listeners

1,580 Listeners

1,852 Listeners

55 Listeners

84 Listeners

96 Listeners

319 Listeners

187 Listeners

262 Listeners

304 Listeners

123 Listeners