Height of the season

Summertime gardening tips

By
July 13, 2010

The New York Times has been featuring much summertime gardening content lately, ranging from a feature on old-school gardening (Thomas Jefferson's gardening techniques, still being used at his Monticello home in Virginia) to regular blogs focused on starter gardens and beekeeping basics. As the Jefferson article noted, in matters agricultural, everything is cyclical:

New gardeners smitten with the experience of growing their own food — amazed at the miracle of harvesting figs on a Brooklyn rooftop, horrified by the flea beetles devouring the eggplants — might be both inspired and comforted by the highs and lows recorded by Thomas Jefferson from the sun-baked terraces of his two-acre kitchen garden 200 years ago.
Subscribe
Comments
There are no comments on this item
Add a comment

Think before you type

Culinate welcomes comments that are on-topic, clean, and courteous. For the benefit of the community we reserve the right to delete comments that contain advertising, personal attacks, profanity, or which are thinly disguised attempts to promote another website.

Please enter your comment

Format: Bare URLs are automatically linked; use this style: [http://www.example.com "place text to be linked here"] for prettier links. You may specify *bold* or _italic_ text. No HTML please.

Please identify yourself

Not a member? Sign up!

Please prove that you’re not a computer


Advertisement
Dinner Guest

Do-over fever

Revisiting September’s efforts

What an essay, grape jelly, and my house have in common.

Subscribe
Graze: Bites from the Site
Local Flavors

The beauty of breadcrumbs

Cherish the humble crumb

The Produce Diaries

Chia seeds

The latest superfood

First Person

Dinner of a lifetime

A changed man

Opinion

The evolution of fresh food

Back to the land — or at least to the farmers’ market

Most Popular Articles

Editor’s Choice