Growing Under the Redwoods: Gardening in Shade and Acidic Soil
Growing vegetables under redwood trees seems impossible: deep shade, acidic soil, moisture competition from massive trees. But you can absolutely grow food under redwoods. You just need to completely rethink what "gardening" means. Forget tomatoes. Embrace the crops that THRIVE in cool, shaded, moist conditions, crops that bolt and struggle everywhere else in Santa Cruz County but flourish in your unique microclimate. This guide covers what works, what doesn't, and strategies for Felton, Ben Lomond, and Boulder Creek gardens.
Tomato trellising techniques in your California Garden
Trellising lifts your tomatoes off the ground, reducing rot, fewer pests, and better air circulation. It's more than keeping your garden tidy; it's about providing your tomatoes with what they need to thrive. This guide covers stake and weave, tomato cages, trellis nets, and DIY options, plus tips for training plants to climb and maintaining support throughout the season.
Growing Parsley in Santa Cruz: The Two-Year Herb That Outperforms
Parsley is the most underrated herb in the garden. While basil and cilantro get all the attention, parsley quietly produces for two full years, tolerates our foggy coastal conditions beautifully, and adds depth to nearly every savory dish. Here's how to grow both flat-leaf and curly varieties in Santa Cruz County.
How to Start a Vegetable Garden in Santa Cruz County
Starting a vegetable garden in Santa Cruz County is one of the most rewarding projects you can take on. Unlike gardeners in most of the country who deal with harsh winters and short growing seasons, we have the gift of year-round gardening. But that doesn't mean you can follow generic gardening advice and expect success. Our microclimates, fog patterns, dry summers, and mild winters require a different approach. This guide walks you through exactly how to start your first vegetable garden here.
Planting Bare-Root Strawberries: A Santa Cruz Guide
Everything you need to know about planting bare-root strawberries in Santa Cruz County, from preparation to first-year care.
When to Plant What: Understanding Our Year-Round Season
One of the best things about gardening in Santa Cruz County is that we can grow food almost every single month of the year. But this gift creates confusion for new gardeners because national seed packets and gardening guides assume you live somewhere with four distinct seasons. That advice doesn't translate here. This guide helps you understand when to plant what in Santa Cruz County, and more importantly, why those timing windows matter.
Understanding Your Soil: A Guide for Santa Cruz Gardeners
Soil is the foundation of your garden. In Santa Cruz County, we have dramatically different soil types depending on location. Coastal areas tend toward sandy, acidic soil. Inland valleys often have heavy clay. Properties under redwoods deal with acidic, often compacted forest soil. This guide helps you identify what you're working with and how to improve it for growing vegetables.
Olallieberry Care Troubleshooting Guide: Common Problems and How to Fix Them
Olallieberries love Santa Cruz's cool, foggy summers, but even healthy canes can run into mildew, fruit rots, insect outbreaks, or weird weather years that wreck a crop. This guide walks through the most common olallieberry problems local gardeners see, how to recognize them, and the simple cultural fixes that usually restore your plants. With practical solutions tested in our unique coastal climate, you'll learn to diagnose issues quickly and get your berry patch back on track.
Growing Calendula in Santa Cruz: The Easiest Medicinal Flower for Your Garden
Calendula is the perfect flower for Santa Cruz gardens. It thrives in our fog, repels pests, attracts beneficials, and makes a healing salve. Here's everything you need to grow it successfully.
Pruning and Training Fruit Trees in Santa Cruz County: Shape Your Trees for Better Harvests
Everything you need to know about pruning and training fruit trees in Santa Cruz County. From basic cuts and timing to espalier techniques and backyard orchard culture for small-space growing.
Growing Manzano Peppers in Santa Cruz County: The Perfect Hot Pepper for Cool Climates
Manzano peppers are uniquely suited to Santa Cruz County's mild climate. Unlike most hot peppers, they prefer cooler temperatures and can produce for years as perennials in our frost-free areas.
Growing Cilantro in Santa Cruz: Beat the Bolt for Longer Harvests
Cilantro is notorious for bolting at the first hint of warm weather, but Santa Cruz County's mild climate gives us advantages most gardeners don't have. With the right timing, variety selection, and succession planting, you can harvest fresh cilantro nearly year-round. Here's how to beat the bolt and keep this essential herb productive.
Fire-Wise Design for Slopes and Hillsides
Learn how to create defensible space on steep terrain in Santa Cruz County. Understand how fire behaves on slopes, expand your zones appropriately, and design fire-wise landscaping that balances fire safety with erosion control. Essential guide for Boulder Creek, Ben Lomond, Bonny Doon, and other hillside communities.
How to Plant and Care for Olallieberries: A Year-Round Guide
Step-by-step olallieberry planting and care for California gardens. Trellising, pruning, watering schedules, and a year-round maintenance calendar for Santa Cruz County.
How Much Do I Really Need to Water My Garden in Spring in Santa Cruz County?
Spring is when Santa Cruz County shifts from rain-fed to irrigation-dependent. Learn when to start watering again based on your microclimate, soil type, and what the local climate data tells us.
Zone 0 Makeover: Creating an Ember-Resistant Space Around Your Home
The first 5 feet around your home is where wildfire battles are won or lost. Learn how to create an ember-resistant Zone 0 with hardscape, gravel, and fire-safe plants for Santa Cruz County homes.
Reviving Your Strawberry Patch After Harsh Weather
Santa Cruz County's mild climate usually treats strawberries well, but extreme weather happens. This guide covers how to assess damage after frost, heat waves, or waterlogging, provide emergency care, and help your strawberry plants recover. Includes specific advice for coastal versus inland gardens and guidance on when to keep trying versus when to start fresh.
Gardening in Coastal Aptos & Capitola: Working with Fog and Stable Temperatures
Coastal Santa Cruz County offers year-round growing with fog, stable temperatures, and almost no frost. Learn which crops thrive and which to skip in Aptos, Capitola, Live Oak, and the Santa Cruz beaches.
Raised Bed Basics for Bay Area Gardeners
Raised beds solve Santa Cruz County's biggest gardening challenges: clay soil, gophers, and poor drainage. Learn how to build, fill, and maintain beds that will produce for years.
Fire-Resistant Fruit Trees for Santa Cruz Gardens
Growing fruit trees in fire-prone areas of Santa Cruz County requires thoughtful selection. Learn which fruit trees offer fire resistance, where to plant them within defensible space zones, and how to maintain them for both safety and productivity.

