About this episode
Leave a comment!This summer has been brutal for gardeners — relentless rain, flooding, fallen trees, fungal disease, and damaging winds arriving right in the middle of the growing season.I want to share with you five practical techniques that genuinely saved my garden during extreme summer weather. These aren’t idealised systems or expensive upgrades — they’re real-world responses to waterlogged soil, wind stress, and disease pressure in a changing climate.This is about observing your space honestly, responding early, and growing with the climate you have — not the one you planned for.🌱 What You’ll DiscoverThe five simple changes that helped my garden survive summer stormsWhy dead mulch and living ground cover work better togetherHow swales protect roots by controlling water movementThe correct way to stake trees so wind strengthens instead of kills themHow fungal disease, wind, and waterlogging are connectedWhy plant diversity is your best insurance policy🛠️ The Five Garden-Saving TechniquesMulching deeply with dead organic matterMulching with living ground coversDigging swales and paths to direct excess waterTying trees correctly for high-wind conditionsCreating raised growing areas through soil and path design🎧 Previous White Strawberries Episodes MentionedMulch, Wanted, Dead or Alive | Mastering the Garden Why Raised Veggie Beds Burn Out Beginner Gardeners | Mastering the Garden 📚 Books & Resources ReferencedThe Permaculture Home Garden — Linda Woodrow 🌿 Join the new Waitlist!! Grounded — a live, four-week online workshop for intermediate gardeners reimagining their space for joy, wellness, and resilience 👉 https://whitestrawberriespodcast.com/grounded101 Gardening — a beginner-friendly introduction to growing for joy and wellness 👉 https://whitestrawberries.com/101gardening🌦️ Final ThoughtClimate-resilient gardening isn’t about doing more — it’s about doing things differently. Observe closely, respond early, and let the land show you what it needs.🎧 Connect with me.