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Sure, you have a non-native invasive species, a beautiful plant, by the way, in a container on your back patio. There's no way it will wind up in a wild space, choking out native plants, depleting the local ecosystem, starving the pollinators. No way. Right? Wrong. Barbara J. Sullivan, who once was a traditional, English garden enthusiast, keeping things clipped, raked, and tucked, took her time accepting some of these ideas. She also implemented them in stages. As she explains, once you understand your private green space as part of an inseparable whole, you will never see it the same way again.
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[SOUND OF BABY CRY AND MICHAEL TITTERTON'S INTRODUCTION].Those are the first sounds and the first voice heard on WHQR when it came to life on 91.3 FM 35…
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With the region’s latest heat wave and the tropical soup that’s spawned Hurricane Gert and three other potential systems in the North Atlantic, it’s hard…
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Spring planting is embedded in our DNA – when the days get longer, the weather warmer, and we know it’s time to take stock of the greening of our piece of…
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This broadcast of CoastLine originally aired on April 1, 2015. Will lilacs or peonies grow in the Cape Fear region? Is Pampas Grass a good landscaping…