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MARGARET ROACH A WAY TO GARDEN

MARGARET ROACH A WAY TO GARDEN

De: ROBIN HOOD RADIO
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A WAY TO GARDEN is the horticultural incarnation of Margaret Roach© 2017 ROBIN HOOD RADIO ON DEMAND AUDIO PAGE
Episodios
  • Crows With Dr. John Marzluff - A Way to Garden with Margaret Roach - July 7, 2025
    Jul 4 2025
    A couple of ravens have been shouting at each other across the garden each day this spring-into-summer, and their loud-mouthed antics reminded me of a somewhat less bawdy conversation about crows and ravens that I had a decade ago on the podcast with ornithologist Dr. John Marzluff of the University of Washington—a conversation I want to reprise on today’s show. Possessing large brains for their body size, a knack for social networking that requires no internet connection, and keen powers of observation, crows and ravens are among the big personalities of the bird world. They are also what Dr. Marzluff calls,... Read More ›
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    25 m
  • Tomatoes With Craig LeHoullier-A Way to Garden With Margaret Roach February 28, 2022
    Feb 26 2022

    Sick of winter? What I find helps, besides the occasional warmish, sunny day, is thinking about tomatoes. And that's what we're going to do today with Craig LeHoullier, author of the hit 2014 book “Epic Tomatoes,” who has over the years grown some 3,000 varieties in his home garden and adds new ones to his list every year

    Craig, who gardens in North Carolina, is a retired chemist with a longtime passion for tomatoes. He's the co-founder of the Dwarf Tomato Project, an advisor on tomatoes to Seed Savers Exchange, and the person who in 1990 named the popular heirloom Cherokee Purple from seed that had been passed down and eventually made its way to him. 

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    26 m
  • Beech Diseases with Beth Brantley - A Way to Garden With Margaret Roach - June 30, 2025
    Jun 27 2025
    A big old copper beech tree is a focal point of my garden, and each time I look out the window at it admiringly these days, I feel the same love and gratitude I always have for its grandeur – but also a deepening twinge of worry. These are increasingly tough time for beeches – both European ones like my copper beech and on a far bigger environmental scale, the precious native beech trees of our Eastern North American forests. I asked Beth Brantley of Bartlett Tree Research Laboratories, who is speaking July 18 on the future of beeches at the annual... Read More ›
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    28 m
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