Few gardening topics divide people as quickly as so‑called “smart” seedling hacks. One photo of toilet paper rolls or egg
February 1 marks one of the clearest symbolic turning points of the natural year. Across Christian tradition, Celtic seasonal thinking,
There comes a moment in every gardener’s life when everything suddenly feels clear. We know when to prune, how much
January 31 is not an empty, abstract day in the calendar. It sits at a crowded crossroads of traditions, quietly
January 30 sits in the deep interior of winter, a day that rarely carries obvious seasonal drama. Yet across Christian
In spring, gardeners often ask: “Why hasn’t it started yet?” or just as often, “Why did it start so early?”
Today, winter is often seen as downtime in the garden. A period when nothing happens except waiting. For traditional gardeners,
January 29 sits in an in‑between space of the year. Nothing dramatic happens in the garden, and that is precisely
“If it rains on St Medard’s Day, it will rain for forty days.” Folk weather sayings like this may sound
By January 28, winter has entered a more reflective phase. The light is stronger now, unmistakably present even on overcast












