Better Lawns and Gardens

5. Chamomile – Traditionally used for digestion, anxiety, and sleep; now popular in teas and skincare.

4. Mint – Known for helping with nausea and stomach cramps, mint is still widely used in teas, balms, and cooking today.

3. Yarrow – When crushed, it can be applied to wounds to help decrease bleeding and swelling; it is also used to lower fever and improve circulation.

2. Comfrey – Used topically to support the healing process of bruises and fractures.

1. Sage – Traditionally employed for respiratory issues and overall wellness; it remains accessible in dried form and is included in herbal mixtures.

Source: Penn State Extension

Palm tree declining in Orlando.

Managing a client installation in November 2025, I was taken aback to see a distressed palm tree in a neighbor’s yard. I felt compelled to help, though I wondered if the homeowner would even be receptive. After a discreet closer inspection, I discovered the root cause, realizing sadly that there was no remedy for this palm tree. What was the problem? Did it happen during the January 2026 freeze? Who is at fault?

I will post the diagnosis on Better Lawns and Gardens Facebook page on April 2, 2026 Facebook

Thank you to everyone who responded with guesses!

Better Lawns and Gardens

Better Lawns and Gardens Hour 1 – Coming to you from the Summit Responsible Solutions Studios. Garden expert and host, Teresa Watkins is joined by Quality Green Specialists Nursery owner, Dana Venrick to talk about excellent trees for Father’s Day gifts. Teresa’ Top Five Pieces of Garden Art. What to plant in June in your landscape. Garden questions include staghorn fern fell – what to do? Can you grow tomatoes in summer in Florida, using moss from trees as mulch, podocarpus declining, is there an olive variety that is pitted and filled with pimento cheese, and more. https://bit.ly/4diIsZH

Better Lawns and Gardens Hour 2 – Coming to you from the Summit Responsible Solutions Studios.  June is National Rose Month! Roses grow well in Florida if they are the right ones. Teresa provides rose care selection, care, and her favorite roses. Teresa’s Dirty Word of the Day is Caliper and DBH. Garden topics and questions include mulberry not looking good,  hibiscus dropping leaves, and propagation, and more. https://bit.ly/4diIsZH

Sign up for Teresa’s monthly gardening newsletter, “In Your Backyard” where you can read Teresa’s what to do in your landscape tips, Landscape Malpractice: How to know when to fire your landscaper,” Teresa’s Design Tips; and more. https://bit.ly/2YRBbsT 

Art in Bloom Garden Tours  Buffalo Garden Walk and Niagara Falls, Canada, The Gardens of Scotland, and The Gardens and Grandeur of the Hudson River Valley. Come join Teresa on incredible garden tours! https://bit.ly/4fe9m62

Graphic credit: Teresa Watkins

Listen every Saturdays from 7am - 9am EST on WFLA- Orlando. Call in with your garden questions and text messages on 1-888.455.2867 and 23680, Miss the live broadcast? Listen on Audioboom podcast 24/7. https://bit.ly/3c1f5x7

Join me on Facebook, Instagram.

#WFLF #WFLA #FNN #WNDB #BetterLawns #gardening #Florida #planting #gardeninglife #radio #southflorida #northflorida #centralflorida #Deland #SHE #Orlando #Sarasota #Miami #FortLauderdale #podcast #syndicated #BLGradio #WRLN #WiOD #gardening #SummitResponsibleSolutions #QualityGreenSpecialists #BlackKow #gardensonInstagram  

To sit in the shade on a fine day and look upon verdure is the most perfect refreshment.

~ Jane Austen

“Mansfield Park”, 1814, p. 85

Our spring has been rough. Summertime temperatures teasingly near the 90’s with nary a drop of rainfall last month. Usually in April, Central Florida receives 3.78 inches of rain, but last month, Orlando only received .37 inches. Since the beginning of 2025, our rainfall is down 7 inches for the year. Fortunately, this month, in the first two weeks of May, we should catch up with the rainfall. We can hope for 6” to 7” just this week.

What does drought stress look like in the landscape?

Drought stressed blueberries, podocarpus, and viburnum.

So what should you do if you find your shrubs?

  • Handwater your plants on the days you cannot irrigate. Make sure you saturate rootball.

  • Make sure irrigation system is hitting the base of the plant. Remember its the rootball that needs water, not the leaves.

  • Hold off on fertilizing till rains arrive.

  • Cut the brown fronds or foliage out.

  • Do not spray pesticides.

Two ways to help prevent drought-stress in Spring and WInter:

  • Right Plant, Right Place based on your soil conditions, either xeric, mesic, or hydric soils.

  • Add organic amendments to your soil. One bag of topsoil or compost, one bag of peat, and one bag of manure for every 10 square feet of area.

Here is a great chart for building healthy Soil with organic amendments:

Find out how to have a great landscape in May, despite the heat and lack of rain. Check it out!

In April, our Art in Bloom Garden Tour traveled to Savannah, Georgia, and Charleston, South Carolina. We visited hidden gardens in Savannah, toured historic homes and plantations, learned how to propagate beautiful irises, and enjoyed a delicious cooking lesson of classic Southern cuisine, and dining in style with a night dinner cruise!  Don’t miss another garden adventure. Go to Art in Bloom Garden Tours!  Tony and I would love to have you join us!

Lizzie’s showing off her amaryllis and warns about being a jive turkey! Her life experience with a bird in the hand and two in the bushes is real. Lizzie talks turkey in her post this month.

Savannah and Charleston have beautiful, shade-tolerant pocket gardens in nearly every landscape. They use dwarf mondo grass as turf, Confederate jasmine on wrought iron fences, and this fun ornamental plant survives Zone 7 winters, and Zone 11 hot temperatures. My Plant of the Month also has yellow Asteraceae flowers. In the shade! Find out what it is and try it! Its architectural foliage is perfect for elegant, whimsical, or classic gardens.

When I go to the theme parks, I admire their instant landscapes that provide that ‘Wow’ factor around every corner. The designs, plant selections, and colors are inspiring. But usually, the theme park attraction landscapes are used as seasonal plantings and expensive. They are designed to be short-term, and believe me; we pay for it in every ticket. City and county landscapes on the other hand, should be examples of sustainable landscapes. My Landscape Malpractice this month was beautiful but not sustainable or cheap, and the location was on a rarely used avenue. It will be interesting to watch it over the next year and see how these new hybrid perennials will do.

My design tip this month is a creative exercise for a landscape that has great bones and potential. Let me know what you would do with an empty slate landscape with a beautiful fountain.

Happy Mother’s Day to all the women who are Moms! Moms with children, Stepmoms, Moms of fur babies and reptiles, Frat Moms, and teachers who serve as Moms in the classroom. My Mom loved roses. Our family consisted of six children in nine years, so she was running from morning till night. She only had one rose bush at a time. But it was always a beautiful rose when it bloomed. Great memories.

If you don’t want to get up early to listen to Better Lawns and Gardens, you can always listen to our podcast here.

Take it easy this month in the landscape, try not to stress out your lawn with excessive chemical treatments. The rainy season will be here shortly.

It is with great sadness to announce that Joani MacCubbin, Tom MacCubbin's wife of 47 years, and co-host of Better Lawns and Gardens for 35 years, passed peacefully Saturday, March 8, 2025.

Send cards to Tom MacCubbin, c/o Better Lawns and Gardens, iHeart Media, Suite 401, 2500 Maitland Center Pkwy Maitland, FL 32751.

In lieu of flowers, please donate in Joani's name to your favorite charity.

Plants with Great Texture

a.      Fatsia Japonica ‘Spider’s Web’

b.      Arizona Cypress, Cupressus arizonica var. ‘Blue Ice’

c.      Alocasia amazonica ‘Polly’

d.      Round-leaf Calathea, Calathea orbifolia

e.      Colocasia esculenta ‘Pharoah’s mask’

Find the plants at your local box store or independent garden center or below:

Fatsia japonica at Southern Living Plant Collection.

Alocasia amazonica ‘Polly at Costa Farms.

Calathea orbifolia at Costa Farms