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Sat, Jun 20, 2026

Dig In: Garden checklist for week of June 21

Summer starts warm – with threat of fire danger

Fri, Jun 19, 2026

The right mulch could help save your house and garden

Fire-resistant mulch benefits your landscape while also buffering against wildfire

Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Improve irrigation efficiency with tips from free class

Placer master gardeners offer workshop in Lincoln

Wed, Jun 17, 2026

Learn how to ‘Grow a Pollinator Garden’

All seven Green Acres locations will host free Garden Talks on pollinator plants

Mon, Jun 15, 2026

Get the blues (and crafts supplies) at this double event

Sacramento Center for Textile Arts hosts annual Art Elephant Sale and Indigo Dye Day

Sun, Jun 14, 2026

Shred some zucchini for this easy blueberry coffee cake

New! Summer squash adds moisture to brunch treat

Sat, Jun 13, 2026

Dig In: Garden checklist for week of June 14

Be prepared for hot days by gardening early

Fri, Jun 12, 2026

Make sure your garden can handle triple-digit heat

How to help your tomatoes and other plants cope with hot weather

Thu, Jun 11, 2026

See what's growing at the Fair Oaks Horticulture Center

Open Garden features Roller Derby representatives, plus master gardener talks

Wed, Jun 10, 2026

Placer County master gardeners host ‘Second Saturday’

See Loomis Demonstration Garden, get answers to summer questions

Tue, Jun 09, 2026

FLIMBY: Grow coneflowers for the pollinators -- and yourself

Echinacea flowers draw bees, butterflies and eventually birds

Mon, Jun 08, 2026

The Secret Garden hosts first ‘Plant Bingo Night’

Evening event features plant prizes and plenty of garden trivia

Sat, Jun 06, 2026

Dig In: Garden checklist for week of June 7

Gusty winds will cool down June (but not for long)

Fri, Jun 05, 2026

See ‘Gardens of the Hills’ and help your neighbors

Assistance League Sierra Foothills hosts 16th annual fundraising tour

Thu, Jun 04, 2026

5 problems in the late spring garden

Summer's essentially here, and bringing its challenges

Wed, Jun 03, 2026

Learn to love lavender at Lavender Day

Murer House in Folsom celebrates fragrant Mediterranean herb

Tue, Jun 02, 2026

FLIMBY: Sunflowers capture Sacramento’s summer attitude

This fast-growing annual makes a big impact in the garden and in the vase

Mon, Jun 01, 2026

Bug-eating plants take Shepard Center spotlight

Sacramento Bromeliad and Carnivorous Plant Society hosts 57th annual show and sale

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Taste Summer! E-cookbook

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Find our summer recipes here!

Garden checklist for week of July 5

Mornings may seem almost cold with temperatures in the 60s before 10 a.m. Wear layers – and give your garden some TLC.

* It’s not too late to add a splash of color. Plant petunias, snapdragons, zinnias and marigolds.

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

* Keep your vegetable garden watered, mulched and weeded. Water before 8 a.m. to reduce the chance of fungal infection and to conserve moisture.

* Water, then fertilize vegetables and blooming annuals, perennials and shrubs to give them a boost. Feeding flowering plants every other week will extend their bloom.

* Don’t let tomatoes wilt or dry out completely. Give tomatoes a deep watering two to three times a week. Harvest vegetables promptly to encourage plants to produce more. Squash especially tends to grow rapidly in hot weather. Keep an eye on zucchini.

* If your melons and squash aren’t setting fruit, give the bees a hand. With a small, soft paintbrush, gather some pollen from male flowers, then brush it inside the female flowers, which have a tiny swelling at the base of their petals. (That's the embryo melon or squash.) Within days, that little swelling should start growing.

* Pinch back chrysanthemums for bushy plants and more flowers in September.

* Remove spent flowers from roses, daylilies and other bloomers as they finish flowering.

* Pinch off blooms from basil so the plant will grow more leaves.

* Cut back lavender after flowering to promote a second bloom.

* Feed vegetable plants bone meal or other fertilizers high in phosphate to stimulate more blooms and fruiting.

Contact Us

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

Taste Spring! E-cookbook

Strawberries

Find our spring 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