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Gardeners are keen observers of what is required to grow healthy plants of all types and sizes. New strategies and solutions to the problems presented by cultivating living things are often contemplative acts. These actions will hold gardeners in good stead as we face climate change – an unprecedented phenomenon that amplifies all those conditions that can make or break our gardening success. Deep reflection on our strategies in taking care of our lawns, trees, shrubs, flowers, and vegetables will be required to manage and adapt to this latest – and biggest – challenge.
Cornell Garden-Based Learning Program
The mission of the Cornell Garden-Based Learning Program is to provide educators with inspiring, research-based gardening resources and professional development to support engaging, empowering, and relevant learning experiences for children, youth, adults, and communities. The Cornell Cooperative Extension Master Gardener Volunteer Network is working to understand and inspire us to take actions in our gardens and communities that will help address the global crisis of climate change.
Gardening in a Warming World Curriculum
The Cornell Garden-Based Learning Program produced Gardening in a Warming World Curriculum curriculum for gardeners, homeowners, educators, volunteers, teachers, students, and anyone interested in exploring how we might examine our gardening practice through the lens of climate change mitigation and adaptation.
Climate Change and Gardening Resources
- Advice to Gardeners from a Climate Change Expert: Wolfe, D. (2012) in Verdant Views.
- Gardening Sustainably with a Changing Climate. In The New American Landscape: Leading Voices on the Future of Sustainable Gardening. Wolfe, D (2011). ed. Thomas Christopher. Portland, Or: Timber Press, a publication of the
- Brooklyn Botanic Garden.Climate Change in the Garden This site offers examples of how community members can get in monitoring, adapting, and mitigating climate change in the garden.
- Cornell Botanic Gardens: Climate-Proof Your Garden
- Arbor Day Foundation: Information about Climate Change, planting trees, and plant hardiness zones.
- Brooklyn Botanic Garden: The Climate Conscious Gardener. This step-by-step guide to offsetting climate change through gardens and landscaping explains what happens when the atmospheric balance of carbon and nitrogen goes awry, and how plants, soil, and synthetic gardening aids (such as fertilizer and pesticides) affect climate (2010).
- Project BudBurst: Project Budburst is co-managed by the National Ecological Observatory Network, Inc. and the Chicago Botanic Garden.
- Union of Concerned Scientists: The Climate-Friendly Gardener: A Guide to Combating Global Warming from the Ground Up.
- US Department of Agriculture: Plant Hardiness Zone Map.
- US Environmental Protection Agency: Greenscaping: The easier way to a greener, healthier yard (2005).