The Real Dirt

 Learn to start tomato plants from seed at the Spring Garden Talk. Kristina Thompson

The Real Dirt blog covers regional gardening issues from soil health to planting for pollinators; from fire resistant landscaping to attracting wildlife. Read all about it!

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Achillea 'Coronation' and purple Pincushion flowers bloom in the Demo Garden. Laura Kling

Spring in the Demonstration Garden

April 13, 2026
Spring is in full swing, and there’s lots to see at the Master Gardeners Demonstration Garden: buds, blooms, flowering shrubs, developing fruits, summer vegetable plants! Plus, wildlife: bees, birds, and butterflies. Here there is something for everyone to discover, enjoy, and perhaps try in their own yard…
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Feijoa for Home Landscapes

April 6, 2026
If you are looking for an interesting evergreen that can serve as a hedge or small tree, why not consider planting one or more Feijoa? Commonly known as Pineapple Guava, Feijoa (Feijoa sellowiana O. Berg.) is an evergreen subtropical shrub or small tree that produces an aromatic edible fruit with a somewhat…
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Fire blight inhibits fruit development on pear. J. Alosi

It’s Fire Blight Season!

April 1, 2026
If you are noticing droopy, dried-out flower clusters on your pears, Asian pears, quince, apples or crabapples, fire blight may be the cause. Fire blight is caused by a bacterium and is a common and frequently destructive disease that usually shows up in April and May, but during dry spell, it may appear in…
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Unthinned peach tree. With no thinning fruit are very small, have poor flavor and are more prone to disease. R. Johnson UC ANR
The Real Dirt: Article

Don’t Hesitate to Thin That Fruit!

March 25, 2026
It is time to start thinking about thinning the fruit on peach, nectarine, plum, pluot, apricot, apple, and pear trees. To produce fruit that is large and healthy, fruit trees need plenty of leaves to feed the developing fruit.  Since trees often set far more fruit than their leaves can adequately support,…
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Defensible space zones. Cal Fire
The Real Dirt: Article

Be Firewise with Fire Resistant Landscaping

March 16, 2026
It’s finally springtime, and many of us are adding new plants to our gardens. That means it is also a good time to review the principles of creating defensible space around our homes. Fire is a normal part of the natural environment in California, so if you live in the wildland-urban interface (WUI), it’s…
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