Celebrating the Summer Solstice
by Beth Schreibman Gehring Summer solstice is the time when we honor the gift of sunlight. The official start of...
by Beth Schreibman Gehring Summer solstice is the time when we honor the gift of sunlight. The official start of...
by Linda S Lange After awhile, however, it became more deliberate—choosing and cultivating those specimens that carried a sinister back...
Another move means another new time for figuring out what conditions herbs will like. It seems to me it’s...
Philadelphia Flower Show 2021 By Janice Cox Hello and happy summer to all of you! This year, I was super...
by Jen Munson, HSA Education Chair Food in our landscapes is not new. Cottage gardens and the French potager’s garden...
By Chrissy Moore BV: I first discovered plants and gardening when I was very young! When I was eight years...
By Candace Riddle The photograph depicts a newly created sensory garden in Maryland’s northern Baltimore County farmland. This garden was...
The good ideas just keep coming! Read on for the third installment of reader-submitted herbal hacks: garden care and herb...
By Andrea Jackson they all were excited to participate. They loved the way everything smelled, and each little girl went...
By Maryann Readal Cajun seasonings, etc. These tiny seeds pack a lot of punch when it comes to nutrition. A...
The use of plants for healing purposes predates recorded history and forms the origin of much of modern medicine. Many conventional drugs originate from plant sources: a century ago, most of the few effective drugs were plant-based. Examples include aspirin (from willow bark), dioxin (from foxglove), quinine (from cinchona bark), and morphine (from the opium poppy). The development of drugs from plants continues, with drug companies engaged in large-scale pharmacologic screening of herbs.
Shiseido Clear Sunscreen Stick SPF 50+ This non-comedogenic…
If you’re not indifferent about the latest happenings…
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