Let me start with a confession. My wife is the gardener in our family. She plans. She plants. She whispers encouragement to wilting tomatoes. My role? I buy the plants (under her supervision), I water, I nod approvingly at her vision, and then I enjoy the results from a lawn chair with a cold drink.
It's a system that works beautifully.
But here's the thing. Over the years, I've made the mistake
of thinking I could help. I've tried. I've blundered. I've planted things in
the wrong places, watered things that should have been left alone, and once, I'm
still not allowed to forget this, I "pruned" a hydrangea into
something that looked like a stick figure.
So, whether you're the gardener or just the spouse who
carries the bags of soil, let me share some lessons learned. Because gardening
blunders can happen to anyone. Yes, even right in your front yard where the
neighbours can see.
Here's the thing about lawns. They're supposed to be green.
If yours is starting to look like the soil underneath is staging a comeback,
it's time to reassess. Watering, fertilizing, and mowing are not suggestions.
They are the holy trinity of lawn care.
If nothing works after you've tried everything, don't
despair. You have options. You can replace the whole thing. Or you can get
creative. Consider ground covers like periwinkle or thyme. Ask your local
nursery for ideas. They love nothing more than a homeowner who walks in and
says, "My lawn is dead. Help me feel better about it."
What did we do? Artificial turf. Looks great. Mows itself.
And my wife no longer has to watch me pretend to know how to operate a
lawnmower.
Here's a hard truth. If your gardening tools are stacked in
the garage because you think they're not worth the storage space, they're not
just looking like junk. They are junk. Full stop.
Go through them one by one. Ask yourself a simple question:
"Do I have a specific plan for this tool in the next six months?" If
the answer is no, it's time to say goodbye. If the answer is "I might need
it someday," that's a no disguised as hope.
Your garage will thank you. And when you actually need a
tool, you'll be able to find it without excavating.
Weeds are the uninvited guests who show up and refuse to
leave. The solution is simple in theory, maddening in practice: keep on
top of them.
Check for weeds regularly. Not once a season. Regularly.
When you see one, dig it out by hand. Yes, by hand. There's something deeply
satisfying about pulling a weed and knowing you've won this small battle.
Then seed the empty areas so something you actually want
grows there instead. Think of it as evicting bad tenants and finding good ones.
If your garden is the size of a postage stamp, take heart.
You don't need more land. You need more imagination.
Think vertical. Walls, arbours, trellises, these are not
just decorative. They're real estate. Let plants climb. Let vines take over
your fence. Create a lush jungle in a space that previously felt like a parking
spot.
It's amazing what happens when you stop thinking of a garden
as flat and start thinking of it as a multi-story building.
Here's a lesson I learned the hard way. Most garden plants
do not survive winter. They don't. They give it their best shot, and then the
frost comes, and they turn into sad brown skeletons.
So, when you're planning your garden, think about plants
that can actually handle the cold. Evergreens are your friends. Plants with
winter interest, interesting bark, persistent berries, and architectural shapes
keep the garden from looking like a graveyard from December to March.
Or do what we do: plant annuals, watch them die, and then
stand in the garden centre in spring as if nothing happened.
A fence separates your property from your neighbour's. But
it also frames your garden. It's the backdrop. It's the stage. If your fence is
falling over or covered in mildew, your garden will look like a beautiful
painting in a crumbling frame.
Maintain your fences the way you maintain your plants. Paint
them. Clean them. Pretend they matter, because they actually do.
Here's what I've learned from decades of being married to a
gardener. Gardening is not about perfection. It's about showing up. It's about
trying something, failing, trying something else, and occasionally ending up
with a tomato that tastes like sunshine.
So, if your lawn is patchy, your tools are buried, your
weeds are winning, and your plants die every winter, take heart. You're not a
bad gardener. You're just a gardener who's still learning.
And if all else fails, marry someone who knows what they're
doing and buy them nice plants. That's what I did. It's worked out beautifully.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a lawn chair to sit in and
a garden to admire. Someone else did all the work.