Search

  • … producing. As the fruit ripens, the plant starts to shut down. Determinate types are good for those gardeners who wish to freeze or can the tomatoes all at once for winter use. Check tomato plants every five to seven days for tiny shoots called suckers. Suckers grow at the junction of a main stem just above a set of …
    Type: Plant Info
  • … cutting back perennials, and pulling out the last of the vegetables. But fall is the season for addition as well as subtraction. In fact, for smart gardeners, fall is the best time of the year to add to and improve your soil. In the … International Year of Soils draws to a close, we hone in on preparing your soil in fall for next spring. “Feed the soil, not the plants.”  We kicked off the May article with the same …
    Type: Plant Info
  • … on plants, share the Garden’s scientific research, and explore rhizomes as a metaphor for interconnectedness. Collaborating Scientists: Pat Herendeen Andrea Kramer Louise Egerton … on plants, share the Garden’s scientific research, and explore rhizomes as a metaphor for interconnectedness. Collaborating Scientists: Pat Herendeen Andrea Kramer Louise Egerton …
    Type: Page
  • … City of Chicago’s Board of Health, Firebird Community Arts in Garfield Park and Open Center for the Arts in Little Village.  She received her Bachelors in Nursing and Masters of Public … City of Chicago’s Board of Health, Firebird Community Arts in Garfield Park and Open Center for the Arts in Little Village.  She received her Bachelors in Nursing and Masters of Public …
    Type: Page
  • … best given a head start inside where it's warm, beginning in late February or March for some plants. Expert greenhouse growers carefully fine-tune conditions for different species and varieties, as outdoor floriculturist Tim Pollak does when he supervises hundreds of thousands of annual, perennial, and vegetable seedlings every year for the Garden's displays. A beginner can start with a dozen plants on a windowsill. Seeds are so …
    Type: Plant Info
  • … Description: Look for this common migrant warbler in any wooded habitat at the Garden, especially areas with …
    Type: Birding
  • … The Dune Willow Wading through frigid flood waters with a GPS unit, David Johannesen searched for the 12 remaining dune willows ( Salix syrticola ) at Illinois Beach State Park in Zion, IL. … and pushed Lake Michigan inland, flooding vast areas of the park. Now Johannesen, a volunteer for the Chicago Botanic Garden’s Plants of Concern rare plant monitoring program , aimed his … Illinois and is listed as endangered in the state. Dune willow’s spring blooms provide meals for early emerging pollinators and its leaves feed the caterpillars of many butterflies and …
    Type: Blog
  • … swear by it, but you need to have all-around good horticultural practices, like scouting for pests.” Japanese beetles Aphids Katja Schulz from Washington, D. C., USA , CC BY 2.0 , via … of different insects is not a bad thing. Beneficial insects come when there’s something for them to eat. “We want to mimic Mother Nature by having diversity in the landscape to strike a … is just one of those techniques,” Tiddens said. While scouting or monitoring the Garden for pests, Tiddens says, “When I see my first aphid, I don’t get too worried. I’ll come back in a …
    Type: Plant Info
  • … And so, our love story began ❤.       The hibiscus dazzled my family by blooming profusely for many years, indoors during the cold months and outdoors on the patio in the summer. Then, one … a larger pot, so I gently tore away at the root ball until there was enough room in the pot for roots and dirt. This helped, and once again, the hibiscus started producing blooms and … I waited just one day too long before bringing it indoors. The overnight frost did not make for a happy hibiscus, and the entire winter, it angrily shed its leaves. I took it back outside …
    Type: Blog
  • … Description: Look in the Dixon Prairie for this grassland bird that, like others of its kind, is no longer common. …
    Type: Birding