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How to Start a Garden Journal: What to Track and Why It Matters

About the Author























Ashleigh Smith
I'm Ashleigh Smith, a native to Northern Utah. I first gained a love of gardening with my grandmother as I helped her each summer.

I decided to make a career of it and have recently graduated with a Bachelor's degree in Horticulture from Brigham Young University - Idaho. My studies have focused on plant production while I also have experience in Nursery & Garden Center Operations.

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1 comment

  • Drew May 22

    I appreciate this article, because I’ve been doing some of this already, but I still don’t really have an organized system yet. I take alot of photos of the plants so I can see their progress. I (sometimes) write on a paper calendar when I plant something or when it blooms for the first time. And I have a spreadsheet with plants that I’m interested in, to compare and see which ones might grow better in my area. I’ve added a “comments” section for the plants that I have tried. But I havent figured out how to consolidate all 3 categories of data into something thats easier to keep up-to-date and easier to review when I want to see what happened last year. If I forget to mark the date of something, at least my pictures have that data saved. Maybe I’ll look up some of those templates you mentioned. But yeah it will always be hard to find time to organize that stuff.


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