
Happy New Year’s Eve GPODers!
2024 is officially coming to a close. As we give the final curtain call on this year there will be plenty of celebrating, but this is also an opportune time for reflecting and setting our goals for next year—including our goals and intentions for the next growing season.
Whether you’ve been gardening for decades or just digging into your plant passions, it’s always important to take stock of what went well this past year and what needs some more work. Did you finally get blooms on a plant that’s been reluctant to flower in previous years? Did you test a new pruning or fertilizing technique that proved to be something you should have tried ages ago? Or is there a part of your garden that needs a little help next spring? Did you have to say goodbye to a plant after many years of growth, and it’s time to researching the best possible replacement? To help inspire reflection (and potentially persuade some of you to submit your gardening goals for 2025), I’ve decide to share my garden resolutions for next year. And if you haven’t yet, go through some garden photos today and reminisce on what you and your plants have been through this year.
3. Expand on the skills I’ve acquired in my vegetable garden. This year was the very first year I grew vegetables and herbs from seed, and I’m happy to report that it was a smashing success! However, anyone that tends a vegetable garden knows that a smashing success can also come with its own set of challenges. My seed starting was so successful that I found myself with far too many plants and a garden that quickly grew out of control. Paired with a busy year where I didn’t dedicate enough time to maintenance that I would have liked, and my harvests were not as bountiful as my early plant growth would have suggested. But this year of experience has really galvanized me to go in even stronger next year. Taking the knowledge I’ve acquired, I’ll be starting seeds again with more intention, far better planning, and more consistent maintenance.
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BONUS: Continue to grow the GPOD community and encourage even more gardening discussion and camaraderie. In the additional time I hope to spend with my plants in 2025, I also hope to find some inspiration and ideas for continuing to inject new life into Garden Photo of the Day. I’m endlessly inspired by the gardeners (long-time contributors and new faces) that keep this blog alive. If you’ve been following GPOD for years or just discovered it in 2024, thank you so much for being here. I want even more gardeners to feel encouraged to share their plants in the new year.
Thank you for hearing out my 2024 gardening lessons, and the goals I’m taking into 2025. I hope some of these resonated with you, or that you’re feeling inspired to write your own 2025 garden goals. If you feel so inclined, share your goals with GPOD! Click ‘View Comments’ and login to comment your goals below, or follow the directions to submit your goals with photos of your 2024 garden.
Have a garden you’d like to share?
Have photos to share? We’d love to see your garden, a particular collection of plants you love, or a wonderful garden you had the chance to visit!
To submit, send 5-10 photos to [email protected] along with some information about the plants in the pictures and where you took the photos. We’d love to hear where you are located, how long you’ve been gardening, successes you are proud of, failures you learned from, hopes for the future, favorite plants, or funny stories from your garden.
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Comments
Happy New Year Kaitlyn! Your gardening resolutions sound very familiar (laughing as I say this). I have failed so many of them and still trying (especially #4 and 5). For 2025, I would love to visit more gardens to learn from them.
No houseplant resolutions here. I only take plants indoors to keep them alive so they can go back out into my mixed containers in the spring. By the end of April they are lined up at the door banging to get out...ha ha ha.
For 2025 I will be making a list of conifers, larger shrubs and trees I want to grow and choosing places to plant them. With a bit of tree removal and site prep (i.e rock and boulder rearranging), I should have plenty of space, and due to my recent retirement, I hope to have plenty of time for that and renovations of my existing gardens.
Happy New Year to the GPOD community! Keep the inspiration coming.
I look forward every morning to the photo's. It brightens my day and gives me inspiration for my gardens.
Happy new year GPODers and happy gardening in 2025 what ever the size of your indoor or outdoor garden is.
Seconded!
Thank you for your work in continuing and expanding this blog. I look forward to it each morning.
My own resolution is to find the "right" pots that withstand freezing and thawing so that I can have more small shrubs and perennials on the patio year around. Ideas???
Re: the right pots
Some suggestions here:
https://www.finegardening.com/project-guides/container-gardening/wonderful-winter-containers
Good luck! I might try some shrubs in containers this year. I really prefer ceramic pots that I overwinter in the garage, however I might buy a few large metal planters from Robert Allen - lighter in weight! At the end of the season I may either store plants in plastic pots in sheltered area outside or give the plants away.
Regarding 2025 Gardening Goals:
- Enjoy the process of gardening, observing nature, chatting with neighbors
- Continue removing invasives e.g. Hemerocallis fulva [insert sound of groaning here]
- Include some new observable planting patterns - fun!
Happy new year! Thanks Caitlyn for sharing your new year resolutions and experience! Every year I planned to grow 12 tomato plants but end up with 20. This year I must limit the total to 15.
Thank you Kaitlyn for your cheerful words - I like your style- and bringing GPOD to us !
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