• October Garden Update

    Forgive me. My more recent posts have been so focused on sharing my gardening tips and recipes with you, that sometimes I forget to share my...

  • It’s Time to Plant Fall Peas

    Have a crop this summer that hasn’t done well for you? You can either keep nursing the plants through bug infestations and disease, or...

  • One Year – One Ton of Fresh Food: Fall Garden Review

    Today’s blog entry is one of a four-post series that highlights my garden favorites over the past year — one post per season. I...

  • The Secret to Growing Beets: Five Tips for Success

    Do you have trouble growing beets? You’re not alone. Here are five tips for getting fresh-from-the-garden beets on your table. 1)   Thin Of all...

  • It’s Electric! Asian Greens Electric Salad Mix

    If you’ve never grown Asian greens before, you might have a hard time deciding where to start! There is certainly more to this group...

  • Got Tromboncino? Make Curried Winter Squash Soup!

    I grow many types of squash in my garden, but perhaps no other squash elicits quite so many comments as our Tromboncino squash. With...

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  • GF Recipes
  • Winter Growing
  • Fall Growing
  • ‘Garden Under Cover’ eBook
Mother of a Hubbard

Fall Vegetable Gardening

  • Cathy | November 5, 2012

    Garlic planting day!

    My garlic bulbs from Southern Exposure Seed Exchange arrived today!   This is our first year growing garlic...

  • Cathy | November 2, 2012

    It happened!

    I just may be the only person on the planet who is happy to find freeze damage on...

  • Cathy | October 30, 2012

    Beginning at the end…

    Most folks say “good-bye” to the garden with fall’s first frost. But I feed our family from the...

Page 2 of 212

Recent Posts

  • The Winter Garden: 250 Varieties of Cold Hardy Plants, Growing Strong!
  • Wrap Your Garden In Winter: A Fabric Row Cover Giveaway!
  • Think Christmas in July: A Winter Gardening Giveaway
  • Pruning Neglected Fruit Trees (and a Fiskars PowerGear2 Pruner Giveaway!)
  • Making Homemade Cordials, with Guest Blogger Kathie Lapcevic

Title

  • Cathy | December 5, 2015

    The Winter Garden: 250 Varieties of Cold Hardy Plants, Growing Strong!

      What do you get when you add 250 winter vegetable varieties + 20,000 square feet of Gro-Guard fabric...

  • Cathy | March 5, 2015

    The Garden Survives (Another) Record-Breaking Winter

    Go ahead… you can blame me for this winter. Again. I’ve already fessed up to you about last...

  • Cathy | February 2, 2015

    Is Clear Plastic Necessary? Success with Fabric Row Covers

    The groundhog saw his shadow today, but my garden and I don’t mind. What about you? Or is...

  • Cathy | January 19, 2015

    Growing School Gardens In Winter

    You’ve seen them before – those abandoned raised beds in a schoolyard near you. Once filled with tiny...

  • Cathy | December 21, 2014

    Calculating Your Garden’s Persephone Days

    What’s the most important factor that limits growth of vegetables in winter? You’d be right if you said...

  • Cathy | November 29, 2014

    Grow Your Own Powerhouse

    What two things do these 10 vegetables have in common? Watercress Chinese Cabbage Chard Beet greens Spinach Chicory...

  • Cathy | November 14, 2014

    Fabric or plastic? Choosing row cover

      Fabric, or plastic? That’s one of the most common questions that I receive about growing through the...

  • Cathy | October 27, 2014

    10 Vegetables More Cold-Hardy than Kale

    If you think winter gardening involves months of eating kale, think again. A wide variety of garden vegetables...

  • Cathy | September 12, 2014

    Winter Vegetable Planting Dates

    Do you know what you could be planting now, for eating in February? Or have you considered that some...

  • Low Tunnels Winter Gardening
    Cathy | September 3, 2014

    10 Reasons Why Low Tunnels Beat Cold Frames for Winter Gardening

    In my last post, I shared with you how it’s desiccation, not really cold temperatures per se, that...

  • About me
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Mother of a Hubbard
I am Wife to Pa Hubbard and Mother to two beautiful girls, ages 5 and 3. I am also a medical school professor, which ultimately allowed me to identify my family’s gluten intolerance issues, but has also influenced my interests in the food-body connection in numerous other ways. Prior to earning a Ph.D. in plant pathology from the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, I taught high school biology and was a seasonal park naturalist for many years. My experiences in medicine, agriculture, natural history, and teaching have all converged into the gardening and gluten-free living blog, Mother of a Hubbard. I hope you enjoy it!

Copyright © 2013 Mother of a Hubbard.

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