Episodes

  • The Missing Piece of Your Ecological Garden
    Jan 21 2026

    Liz Koziol of the University of Kansas shares hew work with mycorrhizal fungi and native plants, and how a properly designed fungal inoculant can make your ecological garden more biodiverse, quicker to establish itself and more resistant to weeds.

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    29 mins
  • An Antique Tool Brings New Knowledge of Native Plants
    Jan 14 2026

    Herbariums, annotated collections of dried plant specimens first appeared in Italy almost 500 years ago. In today's Growing Greener, Lea Johnson, Director of Conservation at the Native Plant Trust discusses why they remain an essential tool for those who track and study native plant populations, and the new technologies herbariums facilitate.

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    29 mins
  • How Your Garden Helped Drive the Deer Population Boom
    Jan 7 2026

    Dr. Elic Weitzel of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History describes the thousands of years of association between deer and people, how they long ago came to prefer human-created landscapes, and why their population has exploded

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    29 mins
  • Behold the Magic of Warm-Season Grasses
    Dec 31 2025

    In a conversation recorded in December of 2019 Shannon Currey, a leading educator in the native plants industry, describes how the unique adaptations of warm season grasses make them winners in an era of climate change as well as invaluable in the late summer garden.

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    29 mins
  • How Vermont sculptor Dan Snow has elevated the traditional New England wall into a powerful, locally rooted art form
    Dec 24 2025

    In a conversation from January of 2021, Dan Snow tells how, using locally sourced stone, he expresses the intrinsic beauty of a site in bold constructions held together only by gravity, friction, and history.

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    29 mins
  • Partnering with Goats to Maintain Biodiversity in Ecological Hotspot
    Dec 17 2025

    Goats love invasive plants, says Elijah Goodwin, Director of Ecosystem Monitoring at New York's Stone Barns Center; and with careful timing and regulation the Center's herd is restoring ecological balance to its 80-acre campus and hundreds of acres of a famous nature preserve.

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    29 mins
  • Seemingly non-invasive exotic garden plants can be ecological time bombs
    Dec 10 2025

    Revisiting a conversation from August 2023 with Dr. Bethany Bradley of the University of Massachusetts, who describes how plants introduced from outside our ecosystems may remain quiescent for decades before turning invasive, and how climate change is threatening to explode this threat.

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    29 mins
  • Snagged: How a Dead Tree Can Enrich Your Garden
    Dec 3 2025

    Wildlife biologist Ken Bevis discusses the many benefits to biodiversity of "snags," standing dead trees, and how to incorporate them safely and aesthetically into our gardens.

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    29 mins