Waking Up the Garden: Early April Tasks for Seacoast Gardeners
Early March marks the quiet awakening of Seacoast gardens. Before spring fully arrives, it is the perfect time to inspect beds for winter damage, prune shrubs before bud break, refresh mulch, and prepare tools for the season ahead. This guide shares practical early spring tasks for homeowners in Portsmouth, Rye, Exeter, and nearby Zone 6b communities to help gardens start the growing season healthy and well prepared.
Starting Cool-Season Crops Indoors
Starting cool season crops indoors is one of the best ways to get ahead of the Seacoast’s slow spring. Brassicas, onions, and leeks benefit from early indoor starts that build strong roots and healthy growth before transplanting into Zone 6b soils. This guide walks Seacoast gardeners through when and how to start these crops indoors, with practical timing tips tailored to Portsmouth, Rye, Exeter, North Hampton, and surrounding communities.
Spring Cleanup: How to Refresh Your Garden Beds After Winter
Expert spring garden cleanup in Portsmouth, NH. Seacoast Gardener offers professional pruning, mulching, shrub care, and bed preparation for Seacoast homes.
Preparing Garden Tools and Irrigation for the Busy Season Ahead
The gardeners who move through a busy Seacoast spring with ease are almost always the ones who did the quiet, unglamorous work of preparation beforehand. From sharpening pruners and disinfecting blades to flushing drip lines and replacing cracked hose fittings, a focused hour or two now saves hours of frustration later — and keeps your plants healthier all season long.
Cleaning Up Perennial Beds Without Disturbing Wildlife: A Smarter Approach to Spring Tidying
Every spring, the urge to clean up arrives before the garden is ready for it — and along the Seacoast, acting too quickly can do more harm than good. Learn how a simple, staged approach to spring tidying protects overwintering pollinators, reduces weeds, and sets your beds up for a healthier, more beautiful season ahead.
Hard vs. Light Pruning: When to Rejuvenate Old Shrubs | NH Seacoast
Pruning shrubs can be tricky—go too light and they stay overgrown, go too hard and you risk long-term damage. On the NH Seacoast, where wind, salt, and harsh winters already stress plants, knowing the difference between light annual trims and hard rejuvenation cuts is essential. Light pruning maintains balance and health, while hard pruning resets old, woody shrubs for fresh growth. The key is timing, plant knowledge, and sometimes professional help to ensure your landscape thrives year after year.