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Home Consults

    Date Posted: Fri, Apr 24 - 11:57 am

    Question

  • Hi! I have a friend in Williamsburg who has been helped by the Williamsburg Master Gardeners Landscape Love committee. Just wondering if anything like that exists with your group on Richmond. I need some guidance in person for a small yard. Thanks, Anne. (804)908-4742
  • Answer

  • Hello and thank you for reaching out to the Richmond Master Gardeners! We do offer home consults as our volunteers have the capacity to do so. If you are interested in connecting with us about this possibility, please email us at rvamastergardeners@gmail.com and answer the following questions: 1. What neighborhood do you live? You are welcome to share your address if you are comfortable doing so. We ask about this because we will try to connect you with a Master Gardener that lives nearby. 2. What is your current gardening knowledge and/or experience? 3. What is your goal for your yard? Once we have this information, we will send a request out to our team to see if anyone has the availability to connect with you. We are a small group of Master Gardeners and we enjoy working with neighbors in the city who are eager to learn more about gardening at home. I'm hopeful we'll be able to make a connection for you!

Home Consult

    Date Posted: Thu, Mar 12 - 11:19 am

    Question

  • I do not know where to start to grow a natural habitat/garden on my side yard. The space is about 4ft by 30ft. The strip is bordered by the driveway on one side and holly bushes on the other side. The area gets afternoon sun. We have unsuccessfully tried growing grass. then, we had the area prepared by a landscaper who cleared the plot and added a few ferns and flox. While it looked great initially, the plot was taken over by some kind of grass/weed that it impossible to get rid of. I have decided to make this a space with natural plantings. I see lots of resources online to refer to, but don't know where to start. Can you help? I live in Henrico County VA.
  • Answer

  • Thank you so much for reaching out to the Master Gardeners! Master Gardener units are often able to help with home consults. Because this is the Richmond unit of Master Gardeners, are efforts are focused within the city limits. There is a very active unit of Master Gardeners in Henrico County that should be able to help you. You can find more information about them and their home consultations here: https://www.henricomg.org/homeowner-consultations/ Best of luck to you!!

Improving Yard conditions

    Date Posted: Mon, Jan 05 - 11:02 am

    Question

  • How to thicken and greening a big yard with out reconstruction
  • Answer

  • I apologize for the slow response to your question. I somehow did not receive the alert and just noticed the question when I was alerted to another question coming through. This is a question that needs more details for a specific response, however thickening and greening a large yard without major reconstruction is very possible, but the best approach depends on both site conditions and the end goal for the space. Before making changes, it helps to clarify whether the goal is a traditional turf lawn, a lower-maintenance landscape using native plants, or a mix of both. In general, improvements without reconstruction focus on soil health, plant selection, and management practices. Start with soil health (no digging required): Core aeration if the soil is compacted Top-dressing with compost to increase organic matter Soil testing to identify nutrient deficiencies or pH issues before fertilizing Next, match plants to both the site and the goal. If the goal is turf: Overseed with grass varieties suited to sun/shade, traffic, and moisture conditions. In Virginia, this often means tall fescue blends, fine fescues for shade, or warm-season grasses depending on location. If the goal is reduced turf: Transition difficult areas (deep shade, poor drainage, slopes, heavy traffic) to native groundcovers or mixed plantings. This can improve appearance and resilience without regrading or major removal And finally, adjust maintenance practices: Mow higher (3–4 inches for most cool-season grasses) Water deeply but infrequently Avoid over-fertilizing, which can lead to shallow roots and thinning turf Some information that would be needed to help give more specific recommendations would include sun exposure (full sun, part shade, deep shade), existing vegetation (grass type if known), size of the yard and problem areas, ultimate goal for the space (turf lawn, natives, or a combination), any recent soil test results. Feel free to follow up with us at rvamastergardeners@gmail.com. We also have some volunteers available for home consults and an in person conversation may be a great way to move forward! Thanks for reaching out to us and my apologies again for the delayed response!