Planting and Growing
People choose to grow plants for several reasons, such as putting food on the table, feeling closer to nature, providing a habitat for insects and other animals, or making the outside of their home look beautiful.
In this section, you’ll find all the information you need for planting and growing home gardens. Topics covered include choosing plants, container gardening, soil testing, pruning, and deadheading. Find tips on home orchards, vegetable and fruit gardens, native plants, and herbs.
How to Plant a Home Garden
Planting your own garden is a very rewarding thing to do. Everyone can benefit from getting their hands dirty, whether you’re planting ornamentals, growing fruits, vegetables, or garden flowers.
The first step is to decide what plants you want to grow. Native plants are a good place to start because they are generally easier to grow and cheaper to maintain. Native trees, shrubs, and other plants also help preserve Pennsylvania’s diversity.
Once you’ve decided what types of plants you want to grow in your garden, the next step is to choose the best location. Picking the right spot for your plants is crucial. Most vegetables and flowers need at least 6-8 hours of full sun every day. They also need plenty of moisture. However, there are plants suitable for a range of different locations. For example:
- Sun to part sun and dry to moist soil: Mockernut Hickory, White Ash, Aromatic Aster, and Golden Aster
- Sun to part sun and wet to moist soil: Red Maple, American Holly, Gray Dogwood, and Blue Flag Iris
- Shade to part shade and dry to moist soil: Maple Viburnum, Wild Columbine, Blue Wood Aster, and Wreath Goldenrod
If you want to plant an orchard, choose a location with plenty of sunlight as this is key for maximum fruit production. Grapes also require lots of sunshine. Most fruits require a fair amount of space, but small fruits, such as strawberries, can thrive in a limited space.
Successful pest management includes plant rotation based on plant families. If you’re worried about the soil quality, there’s always the option of using raised beds. You can quickly build them yourself and allow for gardening in conditions that might not be ideal for growth. Growing herbs is another option because they are some of the easiest plants to grow and tolerate various soil types.
You can start your plants in several different ways. Sowing seeds is the most obvious choice, but you have to make sure you select the best seeds and provide the optimum growing environment. You can sow annual seeds indoors and outdoors. Sowing annual seeds is a relatively inexpensive way to produce garden plants.
Some of the most common annuals you can grow in your garden are marigolds, petunias, impatiens, geraniums, and zinnias. When your annual seedlings have developed their first pair of identifiable true leaves, they’re ready for transplanting.
You can also start your vegetable garden indoors. However, before you’re ready to transplant your vegetable seedlings outdoors, there’s lots of work to be done. For example, the quality of the soil is essential when you begin a vegetable garden.
Container Gardening
If space in your garden is limited, container gardening might be the answer. There’s no right way to create a container garden, however, there are four common principles you should follow. These are:
- Choose the right container
- Use the best potting mix
- Select the perfect plants
- Fertilize and water correctly
You can grow vegetables, edible plants, soft fruits, and flowers. Container gardening is also ideal for small spaces, but it is also very effective if you want to emphasize particular seasonal plants and if you want to supplement your fall landscape.
How to Grow and Maintain a Home Garden
It doesn’t matter what plants you’re growing. Vegetables, fruits, and herbs all require care and attention. Every plant has different requirements and growing needs. For your garden to be free of disease and pests and healthy, you need to water and maintain it properly.
The Penn State Extension Master Gardener Manual covers a wide variety of plant and gardening topics for beginners, advanced gardeners, and plant, landscape, and pest professionals.
Selecting and preparing your vegetable garden site will give it the best foundation. After that, various care and maintenance must take place.
Perennials, for example, benefit from dividing. In the fall, some should be left standing, and some cut down. Deadheading is another job you should do regularly, as it promotes new growth and re-flowering. Learn how to propagate using cuttings and layering, and you’ll be able to grow new plants from existing ones.
In a home orchard, correct pruning is essential if you want your orchard to be productive. Use the Home Orchard Calendar to decide when is the best time to do this important maintenance task.
Pruning Your Home Garden
Pruning is an essential task if you’ve got apples and pears or other fruit trees in your backyard. You can increase your fruit trees’ productivity with correct pruning, and you can also renovate old fruit trees that are out of control.
A variety of other plants benefit from judicious pruning. The late winter is the perfect time to prune trees and shrubs to ensure continued plant growth and vigor. Pruning plays an essential role in the maintenance of ornamental plants, and it can increase their health and beauty. Herbaceous plants benefit from pruning techniques such as disbudding, pinching back, cutting back, and thinning. The best time to prune flowering shrubs is when they’ve stopped flowering.
-
ArticlesButterfly Pea - A Natural Food Coloring
Butterfly pea (Clitoria ternatea) produces a beautiful blue color that is used in natural dyes and is a member of the pea family, Fabaceae. -
ArticlesElderberry in the Garden and the Kitchen
Elderberry is a resilient, large native shrub for use in the home garden and kitchen. -
ArticlesSeed Saving Basics
Have you wondered whether you can replant seeds from your garden? Here is basic information to help you get started with saving seeds. -
ArticlesCrop Rotation for the Home Vegetable Garden
Rotating crops in your garden is essential to prevent pests, diseases, and nutrient depletion, ensuring healthier plants and better harvests. -
NewsGreat Greenhouses of Pennsylvania
Date Posted 1/27/2025As we wait out winter's chill, consider visiting one of Pennsylvania's botanical gardens to explore the warmth of an indoor horticultural display. -
ArticlesGreat Greenhouses of Pennsylvania: Hershey Gardens
The Milton & Catherine Conservatory at Hershey Gardens contains a Butterfly Atrium and changing indoor attractions that provide a welcome escape from the wintertime blues. -
ArticlesGreat Greenhouses of Pennsylvania: Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens
Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens boasts a world-class conservatory in Schenley Park in the heart of the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh. -
ArticlesGreat Greenhouses of Pennsylvania: Longwood Gardens
Longwood Gardens offers guests three great greenhouses to visit, making it an ideal garden destination for a cold winter day. -
ArticlesPrinciples of Garden Design
The principles of good garden design will give the gardener the concepts to create or transform their plot of land into a beautiful garden space that fits their style and meets their needs. -
ArticlesGrowing Gardeners: Mighty Seed Activity
Here is a fun activity to help kids (and adults) see how seeds turn into plants! -
ArticlesCultivando hortalizas y flores en contenedores
La jardinerÃa en macetas es ideal para espacios pequeños, o cuando queremos enfatizar plantas en las diferentes estaciones del año. Este artÃculo habla sobre las plantas, el suelo y los tipos de macetas apropiadas para usar. -
ArticlesHardy Kiwi in the Home Fruit Planting
The kiwi fruit, once referred to as the "Chinese gooseberry," has been grown and collected from the wild for centuries in Asia, and is now commonly available in the Western world. -
ArticlesLow Light Houseplants
How do houseplants adjust to illumination when moving from a bright environment to one with lower light? A Master Gardener deepens her understanding of low light requirements. -
ArticlesHumidity and Houseplants
How much humidity do your houseplants need and how can you provide it? Popular wisdom on increasing humidity for houseplants is probably not correct. -
ArticlesTillandsias as Houseplants
Tillandsias, or air plants, are captivating epiphytes. Learn how to care for them and bring creative, low-maintenance beauty to your home and garden décor. -
WorkshopsHoliday Swag Creations
Length 1 hour, 15 minutesCraft a festive holiday swag with fresh, locally sourced evergreens. Learn preservation tips, bow-making techniques, and design tricks to create a lasting seasonal decoration. -
ArticlesGifts from the Kitchen Garden
Read on for a bevy of edible gift ideas using plants from your own garden and seasonal produce. -
ArticlesWinter Outdoor Arrangements
Carry your garden designs, especially container gardens, throughout the entire year with outdoor winter arrangements. -
ArticlesFinding the Joy of Plants in Winter
Winter can be a season of joy, yet for many people it is also a season where the lack of light can cause sadness. Plants can provide spaces to be at ease and at peace. -
ArticlesPawpaw Fruit in the Garden and the Kitchen
Pawpaw trees are native to North America and are known for their fall fruit that has a custard-like texture and unique taste. Pawpaws are also the host plant for the zebra swallowtail butterfly. -
ArticlesStrange Fruit
Fruit that may look bizarre and taste unusual to us abounds in all parts of the world, but you can have an orchard of strange fruits in your own landscape. -
WorkshopsEvergreen Identification and Centerpiece-Making
Length 3 hoursDiscover how to identify evergreens and craft a stunning holiday centerpiece that adds festive charm to your home or makes a memorable gift. -
ArticlesNative Groundcovers Can Solve Tough Challenges in the Landscape
Discover native groundcovers that thrive on sunny slopes, require little maintenance, and are eco-friendly. -
ArticlesLongwood Gardens and the Thousand Bloom Chrysanthemum
The chrysanthemum festival at Longwood Gardens showcases the spectacular thousand bloom chrysanthemum, a stunning display of horticultural artistry and science. -
ArticlesSummer Shrub Flower Power
Replace invasive flowering shrubs in the landscape, such as butterfly bush, with beautiful native and ornamental choices.



