-
Garden Catalog Collector
-
The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
-
A Gardener's Checklist for Early Spring
-
All About Starting Seeds
-
Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
-
Spectacular Spring Bloomers
-
Design an Engaging Entryway
-
Sweetly Scented Tulips
-
Celebrate Spring with Cool-Season Containers
-
Building a Compost Bin
-
15 Deer-Resistant Plants
-
10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
-
Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
-
Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
-
Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
-
Friendly Ways to Battle Garden Pests
-
Backyard Makeover Game
-
Soil Testing is Worth the Effort
-
Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
-
Enchanting Japanese Maples
-
Variegated Plants Create Drama
-
Cool-Season Annuals
-
How to Start a Vegetable Garden
-
Find the Perfect Tomato
-
How to Grow Raspberries
Subscribe to RSS feed
READER PHOTOS! Magnolias at Longwood Gardens
3 commentsToday's photos are from Viktoria Mullin, who gardens in Connecticut. Victoria had a chance to visit Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, last month at the height of the magnolia bloom...
view details
Happy Holidays!!
7 commentsToday's photos are from Shauna McWilliams in Radnor, Pennsylvania. She recently visited the conservatory at Longwood Gardens and had to share this spectacular gingerbread man tree. For eveyone who...
view details
READER PHOTOS! Pauline's garden in California, revisited
5 commentsBack in the beginning of October, we got a glimpse into Irvin and Pauline Faria's garden in Carmichael, California. Irvin took a few moments last week to send in some fall photos. He says, "Here are...
view details
READER PHOTOS! Sheldon's garden in the Catskills
7 commentsToday's photo is from Sheldon Martin (Our very own Tractor1!!) in the northern Catskill mountains of upstate New York. It's a birch tree that stands in front of his garden shed. Beautiful fall color...
view details
READER PHOTOS! The aftermath of the northeastern October snowstorm
5 commentsA huge snowstorm blew throught the northeast on October 29th, so early in the season that many of our trees were still leafed out. All that extra surface area meant the trees collected way more snow...
view details
A momumental evergreen tunnel
7 commentsI can't begin to imagine how many years it took to grow this evergreen tunnel at Planting Fields Arboretum in Oyster Bay, New York. Any guesses? Here's a helpful tip: As far as I can tell, it's all...
view details
Ouch!
9 commentsWhen I went to visit Bob and Christa Stamper's garden in Zionsville, Pennsylvania, a few weeks ago, Bob pointed out this tree, and I was horrified... Holy cow! He says, "This is the common...
view details
One tough tree
3 commentsContinuing yesterday's tree theme, today's photos are a tribute to the power of nature to overcome obstacles. This tree, on a nature trail just north of Skyland Resort in Virginia's Shenandoah...
view details
Free at last!
5 commentsI wonder how many years this poor tree spent confined in a too-small planter box? No matter. It seems to have adjusted just fine to its new-found freedom. You could almost think of it as living...
view details
A tree's root system revealed
7 commentsI've often wondered, when admiring a tree, what its root system looks like. The Morris Arboretum in Philadelphia found an interesting way to illustrate the breadth of a tree's root system: they...
view details
From eyesore to eye-catching
8 commentsSeveral years ago my neighbors and friends Laura and Bruce had an absolutely MONSTER dead tree taken down in their back yard at the end of their driveway. Seriously, this thing was huge...
view details
READER PHOTO! Beautiful bark
6 commentsAfter leaves and overall size and shape, bark seems to be the last thing people consider when choosing a tree, but maybe it should be the first! Kathy Maras in Glen Ellyn, Illinois sent in these...
view details
Highlighting a gorgeous tree
5 commentsI stumbled upon this little stairway vignette a few years ago on a garden tour hosted by Tangletown Gardens in Minneapolis. I love how the white pots harmonize with the birch's bark, and how the...
view details
Take the time to see...
7 comments...the fleeting details. I was walking around the lake at Innisfree Garden in Millbrook, New York, a couple of summers ago with a bunch of gardening pals when we just happened to catch this ephemeral...
view details
Creative tree-training?
6 commentsThere wasn't a gardener around to grill when I took this photo of a cutleaf japanese maple at Boscobel Restoration in Garrison, New York, a few years ago. I assume the trunk didn't grow this way on...
view details
Monkey puzzle!
5 commentsMonkey puzzle TREE, that is. This is one fascinating tree. The monkey puzzle (Araucaria araucana, USDA Hardiness Zones 7-11) is native to Chile and Argentina (the Andes, more specifically), and can...
view details
READER PHOTO! Lemonade from lemons
9 commentsToday's post is from Katherine Davis. She says, "I had an old oak that had to come down but I thought it would be nice to save part of the trunk and do something "FUN" with it. I now have a tree chair that everyone loves to sit in."
view details
This plant's future is in your hands...
53 commentsHow many couples do you know that have arguments over plants? Well. you can help resolve this one. Eric and Danielle Wotzak have been renovating this fantastic house in Northport, New York, for the...
view details
READER PHOTO: Poor, tortured trees...
4 commentsToday's photo is from Susan Morrison in California's San Francisco Bay area. She says: "This house is in the older part of my neighborhood and unfortunately a lot of the trees are still treated this...
view details
Venerable beauty
1 commentThis impressive tree has decided to ignore the forces of gravity and grow where it wants to go. Photo taken at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, DC. Welcome to the Fine Gardening Garden Photo of the Day...
view details
Beautiful bark
4 commentsWe rely on pines (Pinus spp. and cvs., USDA Hardiness Zones 3-10) for their beautiful evergreen presence in winter, but lacebark pine (Pinus bungeana, Zones 4-7) also has stunning bark to kick it up...
view details
Turn a garden tragedy into a stunning focal point
2 commentsBefore removing that beloved tree or shrub that bit the dust, try highlighting it for another season or two with a coat of vibrant paint. This garden was designed by the horticulturists at the West...
view details
Welcome to the Fine Gardening GARDEN PHOTO OF THE DAY blog!
Every weekday we post a new photo of a great garden, a spectacular plant, a stunning plant combination, or any number of other subjects. Think of it as your morning jolt of green.
Sign up to get new posts delivered to your inbox each morning so you'll always remember to take a look, or subscribe to our RSS feed. We look forward to sharing our garden travels with you.
If you think you have a photo that we should share on the Garden Photo of the day, email us. Send hi-res images to mgervais@taunton.com with GPOD in the subject line. We'll only respond if we plan to use your photo.











