In the Garden: Herbs enhance recipes in summer and winter

This is the time for harvesting herbs from the garden. Recipes improve when you add fresh herbs for seasoning.

Pumpkin serenade: Gardener sings to his plant every day

Arnold Feliciano remembers fondly his days as a strolling troubadour, walking through restaurants singing love songs to couples over food. Now he is skipping the middle man: Feliciano starts his mornings by singing to a pumpkin. And the pumpkin clearly loves it: It is 3 feet tall and growing every day.

Checkout Lane: Tips on growing green grass

Jason Klemp, lawn care manager at Barcellos and Kane Landscape Management in Hingham, Mass., says late summer and early fall are the best times for seeding a lawn.

Looking Up: Starlight, stars bright and dim

Starlight. The word describes the glitter of Hollywood, dance halls, playhouses and other entertainment venues. Stars of screen and stage dazzle the hours away as we watch from theater chairs or our living room sofas. Entertainment, however, has little to do with the stars in the sky.

Green Thumbs Up: Discover the diversity of ornamental grasses

Several days of cool temperatures and abundant moisture should work wonders for my garden, and as I look out my window on this soggy Monday morning, I swear my plants are jumping for joy, lifting their heads to welcome the raindrops that bathe their dusty, parched leaves and stems. Hopefully, more rain will be forthcoming as the fall planting season approaches to ensure that our perennials, trees, and shrubs are sufficiently hydrated to survive the colder months that lie ahead.

Home Help: Paint can add depth to your rooms

Weekly home and garden rail, with tips on painting for small spaces, fixing a loose toilet handle and more.

Checkout Lane: Before buying a mattress, sleep on it

Benjamin Decastro of Cardi’s Furniture recommends that you test a mattress before making a purchase. He says to remove your jacket and shoes, and get into your normal sleep position.

Green Space: Too rich of soil can mean a poor crop of tomatoes

We’re getting a lot of mail from gardeners who have great-looking tomato plants but no tomatoes. Jim finds the cause.
 

David Robson: Some bugs like it hot

Japanese beetles didn't love the weather this summer, but we had other small visitors in our lawns and gardens.

How-to: Don't get sunk by your sink

The kitchen sink should be one of the cleanest areas of the home, but with water and food particles constantly swirling through and around it, it can be one of the dirtiest.

Linda Cobb, a cleaning expert and author best known as the Queen of Clean, shared these tips for keeping the kitchen sink looking and working well.

Garden gadgets: Five products for your lawn and garden needs

These creative inventions can make it easier and more fun to cultivate a lush lawn and bountiful gardens.

Here are five gadgets you can find in stores and online:

Managing your mess: Tips to make closet organization easy

Ideally, you wouldn’t describe your closet as a daunting disaster, overwhelming mess or bottomless heap o’ junk. But let’s face it, it’s always easier to tuck things away than it is to keep them organized.

Wrest back control of your closet with these tips:

Outdoors: Create a safe haven for birds this winter

Many birds migrate to warmer weather when it gets cold outside. But for the non-migratory birds that stick around, it’s more difficult to find food and shelter when the temperature dips.

Protect your plants: Help your garden make it through the long, cold winter

Winter’s deep freeze is just around the corner, and perennial plants and flowers need special care to help them through the cold season.

Pete Steiner, manager of Grand Street Gardens in Chicago, shared these tips for keeping plants happy during the winter to ensure blooms in the spring:

On trend: Professional tips for flawless home style

Fall 2010 brings new looks and fresh styles for home interiors. Natural products and green items are all the rage, making way for an exciting variety of trends sure to turn up the style in your humble abode.

Update your fireplace for immediate pay-offs

“There is no place more delightful than one’s own fireplace.” This declaration from Rome’s great orator Cicero remains true even today.

What can be considered the heart of the home, the fireplace is too often a neglected spot. What a pity. The fireplace not only warms a room, it also shows off a homeowner’s personal style and decor. Designed properly, it can be a focal point.

Fireplace upgrades -- from inexpensive quick fixes to total rebuilds -- are an easy way to personalize and improve the value of a home.

Fall cleaning: Six steps to a healthier home

Last flu season, we all became familiar with those dictums about the spread of viruses. Indeed, the advice bears repeating.

“The best advice – and most important advice – is to cover your cough and to wash your hands. Respiratory transmission and shaking hands with someone who is ill and hasn’t washed their hands are predominate ways respiratory viruses are spread,” says Jeff Taylor of the Emerging and Acute Infectious Disease Branch of the Texas Department of State Health Services.

But as fall approaches with colder weather – and people spend more time inside and sharing confined spaces – there are other steps you can take to make your home healthier as you get ready to close it up for winter.

Rid your roof of leaves and snow: Follow these safety precautions

Leaves and snow that build up on your roof and in your gutters can cause lots of problems if they’re not cleared away.

Too much snow can lead to cave-ins, and ice dams can damage the roof and interior of your home. Leaves that build up in the gutters put you at risk for water damage, as rain has nowhere to run off to and can leak into the roof and walls.

Unfortunately, leaf and snow removal is no easy task and can be dangerous if it’s not done correctly. If you’re looking to clear your roof and gutters yourself, here are five things to keep in mind:

Looking Up: Here’s comes the 'king' of planets, Jupiter

Jupiter, called the "king of planets," is making its grand entrance in the east. The planet rises around 8 p.m. in mid-August and 8:30 by month’s end. Jupiter is nearing opposition - when it is on the opposite side of the Earth from the sun, rising at just about the very moment the sun sets below our horizon. Jupiter then reigns all night, setting in the west at sunrise.

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