Joe Ingram, of Morganton, works in his community garden plot along the Catawba River Greenway on Wednesday.
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The Curfman family in western Burke County prescribes to a nontraditional style of gardening.
Long before the first bulb rises from the frozen ground or winter transforms into spring, the N.C. Cooperative Extension office hosted a landscape gardening workshop for those interested in planning garden spots around their home.
On a frigid February morning, almost 50 people showed up for a workshop on pruning fruit trees.
After house-hunting, negotiating a price and working out details of his move, Patrick O'Leary was ready to tackle the real work: understanding and operating the various mechanical systems in his new, 6,000-square-foot home.
A couple of years ago, when my daughter was about 3, she delved happily into a container of freeze-dried strawberries and yelled over the "prize" she found inside.
If you're looking for the perfect housewarming gift, check out a hardware store. People moving into a new place will probably want to hang a few things and change a few things.
Job-seekers, take note: You want to be productive in planning your next move, and writing cover letters on your bed probably isn't going to cut it. That's why more and more people are thinking about how to create an instant home office.
A little digging in the kitchen cupboards is all that's needed to round up enough supplies to polish, clean and disinfect every room in the home.
The rules in the sewing lounge read like metaphors for good living: Know where your fingers are at all times. No running with scissors. Look before you cut.
When Amy Herendeen first became a stay-at-home mom, she dedicated a lot of time and effort to keeping house. But the chores were often interrupted by her daughter's needs. Trying to be the "perfect housewife" and take care of an infant left her feeling frustrated and angry.
Perhaps the biggest theme in home decorating going into fall is comfortable, real, personalized style.
Bonnell Queen, 90, of 205 Bristol St. holds a Mr. Striper tomato from his home garden.
Home decorators who once would have dropped thousands of dollars on designer furniture are now, in a down economy, looking at inexpensive, self-assembly pieces from big-box stores as a jumping-off point for more custom designs.
Read about roses, talk to other gardeners about growing them, and insect and disease problems seem inevitable.
Someday, our ceilings and walls might radiate light, illuminating indoor spaces as brightly and evenly as natural daylight.
Blooms may be losing some luster among cash-strapped gardeners weeding out nonessential spending. A practical option is investing in an assortment of low-risk, high-return shrubs.
For about 15 years, a big yellow garage marked the south boundary of our backyard garden. It set off the blue bigleaf hydrangeas very nicely, but it wasn't exactly the look we wanted.
"Look, Spot! Look and see... ."
This spring, Oprah declared that wallpaper is back.
Backyard bird watching is a fairly simple exercise. Provide enough food, water and cover, and birds will come flocking. Playing favorites, though, calls for using the right kinds of incentives.
Millstone Meadows Farm, 2595 Henderson Mill Rd., held its fifth annual Daylily Festival on Saturday. The farm features greater than 1,300 varieties of daylilies.
In Africa, Asia and Latin America, gifted craftspeople who can express age-old traditions in beautiful ways often lack access to raw materials and distribution venues. And they may have no expertise in getting their goods to a wider marketplace.
Bear W Daylily Farm presents its annual Daylily festival on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2p.m.
Got the do-it-yourself itch but little time or cash to spare? Look around at the furniture you've already got. Some of it probably could use a refreshing coat of paint. In fact, a new color may put the "wow" back into a room.
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