| Gardening Tips |
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WWW could easily mean Water, Weeds, and a Wealth of information for computer-literate gardeners. There are literally thousands of sites devoted to gardening with an endless supply of information on growing anything to everything. Be ready for a full crop of plant encyclopedias, garden designs and plans, how tos, weather zone maps, and gardening tips as well as garden specific message boards and chats.
WWW could easily mean Water, Weeds, and a Wealth of information for computer-literate gardeners. There are literally thousands of sites devoted to gardening with an endless supply of information on growing anything to everything. Be ready for a full crop of plant encyclopedias, garden designs and plans, how tos, weather zone maps, and gardening tips as well as garden specific message boards and chats.
Digging in the Web Rebecca Kolls encourages you to keep those hands dirty at her site, Rebecca's Garden. She will hold your hand (clean or dirty) for step-by-step instructions or send you tiptoe-ing through the tulips with quick tips. Her garden planning section is especially helpful with an interactive tool to design your dream garden. Use it to place trees, shrubs, and flowers around your house or to locate new flowerbeds and planters. More gardening information can be unearthed at the extensive Country Living Gardener. This site for green thumb surfers is packed full of garden tours, expert planting advice, and even tips on garden decorating. Don't hang up your hoe yet. Dig in to a great site called the GardenWeb which describes itself as the "Internet's Garden Community." GardenWeb stands apart from the multitude of Internet garden sites by being the first to have established an actual community of users through forums. More than two thirds of all messages posted to garden-related forums and newsgroups on the Web are posted at GardenWeb. In addition, GardenWeb also hosts garden exchanges, articles, contests, the Web's largest garden-related glossary, and online catalogs. GardenWeb's HortiPlex Plant Database offers plant images and data as well as links to information sources and vendors. An interesting feature is the Garden Exchange where gardeners post requests for seeds and plants as well as offers of items for trade. Other links whisk you off to a calendar of events, directories of nurseries and catalogs, gardening societies and associations, and cooperative extension services. Need to find the botanical name for a specific plant? I bet you will have no trouble at the Department of Agriculture PLANTS Database. This site includes a large database of plant names as well as a plant photo gallery and plant fact sheets. Check out culturally significant plants, noxious and invasive plants, threatened and endangered plants, and wetland plants.
Trees and Birds and Bees The National Wildlife Federation claims it is easy to make your lawn hospitable to wildlife. Their Backyard Wildlife Habitat Program site will have you watching the butterflies and hummingbirds dance in search of nectar and listening to the trill of songbirds and the plop of frogs jumping into a pond. According to the Wildlife Federation, it doesn't matter where you live or how much space you have. Their new interactive site can be invaluable for planning and improving your habitat. It will provide you with everything from planning tools to online experts, discussion boards, and more.
Organic Gardening
Herb Gardening
To the Spade, Trowel, and Hose
 
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