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Sat, Jan 10, 2026

Dig In: Garden checklist for week of Jan. 11

Sunny afternoons follow chilly nights and foggy mornings

Fri, Jan 09, 2026

Green Acres hosts huge sale at five locations

Winter clearance event offers deep discounts on outdoor furniture, accessories

Thu, Jan 08, 2026

Learn tree pruning basics in Placer workshop Saturday

Ornamental and fruit trees, tools and techniques covered in master gardeners' workshop

Wed, Jan 07, 2026

New roses for 2026: What’s on tap from major breeders

Expect easy care combined with Old World charm – and lots of fragrance

Tue, Jan 06, 2026

FIMBY: Hints for choosing tomato seeds

Seed catalogs offer infinite varieties, but most gardens have only so much room

Mon, Jan 05, 2026

Start new year with Open Garden Day

Get expert advice from master gardeners, and get the 2026 Gardening Guide, too

Sun, Jan 04, 2026

Something juicy, something crunchy to beat winter blues

New! Grapefruit-cabbage salad with Dijon mustard vinaigrette

Sat, Jan 03, 2026

Dig In: Garden checklist for week of Jan. 4

New year starts soggy; watch out for saturated soil

Fri, Jan 02, 2026

Learn how to prune and train climbing roses

Free workshop offers hands-on training for roses growing on arbors, trellises, fences or walls

Thu, Jan 01, 2026

Deadline soon for Saul Wiseman Grants applications

Annual awards presented by Sacramento Perennial Plant Club

Wed, Dec 31, 2025

Happy New (Rain) Year! Drought looks unlikely heading into 2026

No surprise: Sacramento's ahead of average in seasonal precipitation

Tue, Dec 30, 2025

FIMBY: Why winter is the perfect time to plant fruit trees

Many varieties are drought-resistant; save water in summer by planting in winter

Mon, Dec 29, 2025

Learn how to prune a rose bush in under 3 minutes

Free rose care workshop tackles winter pruning and much more

Sun, Dec 28, 2025

Sunny orange jam brightens a winter day

New! Thyme flavors an easy not-too-sweet concoction

Sat, Dec 27, 2025

Dig In: Garden checklist for week of Dec. 28

Final days of 2025 offer break from rain, return of fog

Fri, Dec 26, 2025

Recycle your Christmas tree, get free mulch

Where to ‘mulch’ your tree in Sacramento and Yolo counties

Thu, Dec 25, 2025

As gardeners, we receive many gifts all year

The natural world provides joys and food and more

Wed, Dec 24, 2025

Making the case for mistletoe

A bane to trees, this holiday staple is an important food source for birds

Tue, Dec 23, 2025

FIMBY: Is edible gardening possible indoors?

Think small, think green -- and have plenty of good light

Mon, Dec 22, 2025

Why do branches, trees fall during storms?

Expect to see dropped limbs and fallen trees as wet, windy storms continue

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Taste Spring! E-cookbook

Strawberries

Find our spring recipes here!

Garden checklist for week of June 14

We'll be back to normal temperatures for mid-June (about 86 degrees) by Thursday. In the meanwhile:

* Let the grass grow longer. Set the mower blades high to reduce stress on your lawn during summer heat. To cut down on evaporation, water your lawn deeply during the early hours of the morning, between 2 and 8 a.m.

* Tie up vines and stake tall plants such as gladiolus and lilies. That gives their heavy flowers some support.

* Dig and divide crowded bulbs after the tops have died down.

* Feed summer flowers with a slow-release fertilizer.

* Mulch, mulch, mulch! This “blanket” keeps moisture in the soil longer and helps your plants cope during hot weather.

* Avoid pot “hot feet.” Place a 1-inch-thick board under container plants sitting on pavement. This little cushion helps insulate them from radiated heat.

* Thin grapes on the vine for bigger, better clusters later this summer.

* Cut back fruit-bearing canes on berries.

* Warm weather brings rapid growth in the vegetable garden, with tomatoes and squash enjoying the heat. Deep-water, then feed with a balanced fertilizer. Bone meal can spur the bloom cycle and help set fruit.

* Generally, tomatoes need deep watering two to three times a week, but don't let them dry out completely. That can encourage blossom-end rot.

* Feed camellias, azaleas and other acid-loving plants. Mulch to conserve moisture and reduce heat stress.

* Cut back Shasta daisies after flowering to encourage a second bloom in the fall.

* Trim off dead flowers from rose bushes to keep them blooming through the summer. Roses also benefit from deep watering and feeding now. A top dressing of aged compost will keep them happy. It feeds as well as keeps roots moist.

* Pinch back chrysanthemums for bushier plants with many more flowers in September.

* From seed, plant corn, pumpkins, radishes, squash and sunflowers.

* Plant basil to go with your tomatoes. There’s still time to plant melons, pumpkins and squash from seed.

* Transplant summer annuals such as petunias, marigolds and zinnias. It’s also a good time to transplant perennial flowers including astilbe, bidens, columbine, coneflowers, coreopsis, dahlias, rudbeckia, salvia and verbena.

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Send us a gardening question, a post suggestion or information about an upcoming event.  sacdigsgardening@gmail.com

Taste Summer! E-cookbook

square-tomatoes-plate.jpg

Find our summer recipes here!

Taste Fall! E-cookbook

Muffins and pumpkin

Find our fall recipes here!

Taste Winter! E-cookbook

Lemon coconut pancakes

Find our winter recipes here!

Food in My Back Yard (FIMBY) Series

Lessons learned during a year of edible gardening

WINTER

Is edible gardening possible indoors?

Hints for choosing tomato seeds

Starting in seed starting

Why winter is the perfect time to plant fruit trees

When to plant? Consider staggering your transplants

How to squeeze more food into less space

Potatoes from the garden

Plant a fruit tree now -- for later

Win the weed war by tackling them in winter

Tips for planting bare-root trees, shrubs and vegetables

Time to give vegetable seedlings some more space

Ways to win the fight against weeds

FALL

Dec. 16: Add asparagus to your edible garden

Dec. 9: Soggy soil and what to do about it

Dec. 2: Plant artichokes now; enjoy for years to come

Nov. 25: It's late November, and your peach tree needs spraying

Nov. 18: What to do with all those fallen leaves?

Nov. 11: Prepare now for colder weather in the edible garden

Nov. 4: Plant a pea patch for you and your garden

Oct. 27: As citrus season begins, advice for backyard growers

Oct. 20: Change is in the autumn air 

Oct. 13: We don't talk (enough) about beets

Oct. 6: Fava beans do double duty

Sept. 30: Seeds or transplants for cool-season veggies?

Sept. 23: How to prolong the fall tomato harvest 

SUMMER

Sept. 16: Time to shut it down? 

Sept. 9: How to get the most out of your pumpkin patch

Sept. 2: Summer-to-fall transition time for evaluation, planning

Aug. 26: To pick or not to pick those tomatoes?

Aug. 19: Put worms to work for you

Aug. 12: Grow food while saving water

Aug. 5: Enhance your food with edible flowers

July 29: Why won't my tomatoes turn red?

July 22: A squash plant has mosaic virus, and it's not pretty

July 15: Does this plant need water?

July 8: Tear out that sad plant or baby it? Midsummer decisions

July 1: How to grow summer salad greens

June 24:  Weird stuff that's perfectly normal

SPRING

June 17: Help pollinators help your garden

June 10: Battling early-season tomato pests

June 3: Make your own compost

May 27: Where are the bees when you need them?

May 20: How to help tomatoes thrive on hot days

May 13: Your plants can tell you more than any calendar can

May 6: Maintain soil moisture with mulch for garden success

April 29: What's (already) wrong with my tomato plants?

April 22: Should you stock up on fertilizer? (Yes!)

April 15: Grow culinary herbs in containers

April 8: When to plant summer vegetables

April 1: Don't be fooled by these garden myths

March 25: Fertilizer tips: How to 'feed' your vegetables for healthy growth