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House Bill 2001 – by Sandy J. Brown

On Real Estate & More – December 2019/January 2020

Oregon is making a significant change in what type of housing is allowed to be built in the state. House Bill (HB) 2001 was adopted by the Oregon Legislative Assembly in June 2019 and gained national attention as Oregon is the first state in the nation to […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:53-07:00December 2nd, 2019|Sandy J. Brown|Comments Off on House Bill 2001 – by Sandy J. Brown

Buy It When You See It – by Margaret Barnes

Speaking of Antiquing – December 2019/January 2020

Gift giving season is upon us. Many people buy items for the people on their list all year-long, but many wait for the holiday seasonal rush. Be it Christmas or Hanukkah, shopping begins the day after Thanksgiving in many households.

We’ve all seen the transition from running around from store […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:53-07:00December 2nd, 2019|Featured Stories, Speaking of Antiquing|Comments Off on Buy It When You See It – by Margaret Barnes

David Linn – Master Builder – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

Pioneer Profiles – December 2019/January 2020

Most of Jacksonville’s original wooden buildings were destroyed in multiple fires, but a few remain. At least two of these landmarks were the work of master builder David Linn. One, the 1854 St. Andrews Methodist-Episcopal Church, was a product of his early Jacksonville career. The other, the 1881 Presbyterian Church, […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:53-07:00December 1st, 2019|Featured Stories, Pioneer Profiles|Comments Off on David Linn – Master Builder – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

The Soul of the Season – by Kate Ingram

Soul Matters – December 2019/January 2020

It’s two weeks before Thanksgiving as I write this. Walking in town yesterday, I was met by store windows chock full of Christmas. Displays of faux snow and baubles, decorations and gifts sat in strange juxtaposition with the unusual, t-shirt-warm weather. It was unsettling.

I’m not in sync with this Christmas […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:53-07:00December 2nd, 2019|Featured Stories, Soul Matters|Comments Off on The Soul of the Season – by Kate Ingram

Share the Spirit – by Mayor Paul Becker

A Few Minutes with the Mayor – December 2019/January 2020

Deck the halls with boughs of holly
Fa la la la la, la la la la
‘Tis the season to be jolly
Fa la la la la, la la la la

Familiar words at this time of year, yes, but what if we cannot muster up any “jolly-ness?” What […]

By |2019-12-02T09:33:51-08:00December 2nd, 2019|A Few Minutes with the Mayor, Featured Stories|Comments Off on Share the Spirit – by Mayor Paul Becker

Home for the Holidays – by Michael Kell

A Cup of Conversation – December 2019/January 2020

Our kids and their families are all coming home for Christmas. Mary cannot stop smiling. The newlyweds are wheels down on Christmas Eve. If asked, our beautiful girl would say there is no place on earth she’d rather be for the holidays. Even our Bay Area, Forty-Niner football […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:53-07:00December 2nd, 2019|Cup of Conversation, Featured Stories|Comments Off on Home for the Holidays – by Michael Kell

Have Yourself a Merry Misfits Christmas – by Paula & Terry Erdmann

The Unfettered Critic – December 2019/January 2020

‘Tis time again for animated Christmas specials to pop-up on the tube, many of them rebroadcasts of beloved classics from decades ago. We won’t waste precious space to list them all (honestly, do you really care to hear about Grandma got Run Over By a Reindeer?). Instead, we’ll touch […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:53-07:00December 2nd, 2019|Featured Stories, The Unfettered Critic|Comments Off on Have Yourself a Merry Misfits Christmas – by Paula & Terry Erdmann

“Holidays at Hanley” – by Pam Sasseen

Focus on Hanley Farm – December 2019/January 2020

Throughout this tumultuous year, friends and families have visited Hanley Farm, participating in its many events, or picnicking in the shade of the Hanley trees and playing heritage games with their children. It is all of you who have visited and enjoyed Hanley Farm, that enable the Southern […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:53-07:00December 2nd, 2019|Featured Stories, Focus on Hanley Farm|Comments Off on “Holidays at Hanley” – by Pam Sasseen

Autumn in the Applegate – “Uncorked” Wine Barrel Tour – by Peggy Dover

Are you curious about the local wine buzz, but a lack of wine know-how prevents you from diving in? Or maybe you’re well acquainted with the bounty our area has to offer in wines but want to check out a few new labels. Either way, Uncorked is the answer.

On Saturday, November 23rd, from 11:00am-4:00pm, the […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Now, Peggy Dover|Comments Off on Autumn in the Applegate – “Uncorked” Wine Barrel Tour – by Peggy Dover

Britt Education and Engagement Joining Global GivingTuesday Movement

Britt Education and Engagement is Joining the Global GivingTuesday Movement to raise $5,000 for education programs that benefit children and schools throughout Jackson & Josephine Counties

Medford, Oregon – This GivingTuesday, Britt Education & Engagement will celebrate giving by raising $5,000 for our free music education programs.

GivingTuesday, taking place December 3rd, is a global day of […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00November 8th, 2019|News From Britt Hill, Now|Comments Off on Britt Education and Engagement Joining Global GivingTuesday Movement

Gratitude is Riches – by Michael Kell

A Cup of Conversation – November 2019

“Gratitude is riches. Complaint is poverty.”~Doris Day

I’m grateful for the freedoms our great nation has provided but afraid Doris’s generation may have been freedom’s last. Privilege of freedom came at great cost born by those before me. I’m so grateful for their sacrifice but fear blood spilled and treasure […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Cup of Conversation|Comments Off on Gratitude is Riches – by Michael Kell

Grief and Gratitude – by Kate Ingram

Soul Matters – November 2019

Ten days ago, I was planning on writing the expected piece on “gratitude” for this November edition. And then, the unexpected randomness of Life happened and my companion, Baci (whom you may recall from his recent celebrity appearance in this column) had a disc rupture, leaving his back legs paralyzed.

I spent […]

By |2019-10-29T17:58:46-07:00October 29th, 2019|Soul Matters|Comments Off on Grief and Gratitude – by Kate Ingram

Healthy Holidays – by Yvette Bedrossian

Eastern Medicine Connection – November 2019

There is no good time of year to get sick. Working in hospitals since I was a teenager, I used to fall ill all the time. Even though I only worked with cardiac and surgical patients, where germs were neutralized at every turn, I was vulnerable to every kind of […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Spa Jacksonville|Comments Off on Healthy Holidays – by Yvette Bedrossian

EFU Zoning and Hemp – by Sandy J. Brown

On Real Estate & More – November 2019

One of the things many people enjoy about living in Jackson County is the rural feel of the area and its open farmland. But as evidenced over the last year, a lot of that farmland is being planted to hemp, which is unmistakable at harvest season, when the […]

By |2019-10-29T17:39:44-07:00October 29th, 2019|Sandy J. Brown|Comments Off on EFU Zoning and Hemp – by Sandy J. Brown

Holidays are Here at the Farm! – by Pam Sasseen

Focus on Hanley Farm – November 2019

The holidays are absolutely here at Hanley Farm! Make your own holiday wreath on Saturday, November 30, from 11:00am-3:00pm, using all-natural materials clipped from the trees and bushes that grace the farm. Wreath-making kits that include all you need will be available for only $15 for non-SOHS Members, and […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, Focus on Hanley Farm|Comments Off on Holidays are Here at the Farm! – by Pam Sasseen

Traveling the Globe by Finger – by Margaret Barnes

Speaking of Antiquing – November 2019

People of a certain age will understand the love for and fascination with a paper map. The road map…folded in a specific way that only patience and agility can repeat. Kept in the glove box of the family car… as the key to destination precision.

In the 1860’s, Rand McNally published […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, Speaking of Antiquing|Comments Off on Traveling the Globe by Finger – by Margaret Barnes

Barbara Oakes Made a Career of Volunteering – by Mike McClain

Sensational Seniors – November 2019

When I first asked long-time Jacksonville resident, Barbara Oakes, to consent to being interviewed for “Sensational Seniors,” she replied, “Oh gosh, I have never done anything that was sensational.” Hopefully, this article will prove how wrong her initial assessment was.

Born on May 21, 1944 in Santa Ana, California, her father was […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, Sensational Seniors|1 Comment

Going Green – by Graham Farran

Let’s Talk Real Estate – November 2019

I recently took a Continuing Education class on “Going Green,” something I didn’t know much about. I was surprised by what I learned and how much each of us can impact our environment. It was a great class and information worth sharing.

It’s surprising that the focus on our environment […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, Let's Talk Real Estate|Comments Off on Going Green – by Graham Farran

Crime and Punishment in a Gold Rush Town – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

Pioneer Profiles – November 2019

This year’s Meet the Pioneers tours of Jacksonville’s historic cemetery included several vignettes portraying 19th Century crime and punishment. In one, a man named Matt Shannon had been killed in an 1881 fist fight when his opponent shot him in the head with a concealed gun. A jury declared the murderer […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, Pioneer Profiles|Comments Off on Crime and Punishment in a Gold Rush Town – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

Unfettered Gratitude – by Paula & Terry Erdmann

The Unfettered Critic – November 2019

The Oxford English Dictionary defines “Gratitude” as: “A warm sense of appreciation of kindness received, involving a feeling of goodwill towards the benefactor, and a desire to do something in return.”

Not bad, eh? We couldn’t have said it better ourselves, and in gratitude to the OED editors we’ll return the […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:54-07:00October 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, The Unfettered Critic|Comments Off on Unfettered Gratitude – by Paula & Terry Erdmann

Gratitude for our Little Rotary Club – by Donna Briggs

News From Britt Hill – November 2019

Many moons ago, I was interviewed for the Executive Director position by a panel of nine Britt Music and Arts Festival Board members. The interview lasted 1.5 hours and covered many different areas of the professional expertise needed for the job. Given my extensive background in non-profit management, I […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:55-07:00October 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, News From Britt Hill|Comments Off on Gratitude for our Little Rotary Club – by Donna Briggs

2019 Britt Season Strong Due to Good Weather and Big Acts

MEDFORD, OR — The Britt Music & Arts Festival has finished an outstanding season filled with wonderful weather and lots of big artists, and is thanking its patrons, members, business partners, media partners, artists and fans for a successful season. Ticket sales started slightly slow before the season began, but caught up and surpassed 2018 […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:55-07:00September 18th, 2019|News From Britt Hill, Now, Performing Arts|Comments Off on 2019 Britt Season Strong Due to Good Weather and Big Acts

Hanley Farm’s Haunting October Events! – by Pam Sasseen

Focus on Hanley Farm – October 2019

Annual Scarecrow Festival—On October 5 & 6 at the Annual Scarecrow Festival from 11:00am-4:00pm, you can make a scarecrow and enter it in the Scarecrow Contest or take it home to protect your gardens and fields. Be sure to take a hayride, paint a pumpkin, bob for apples, and […]

By |2019-10-15T09:36:05-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, Focus on Hanley Farm|Comments Off on Hanley Farm’s Haunting October Events! – by Pam Sasseen

The Walking Wounded – by Kate Ingram

Soul Matters – October 2019

“Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.” ~ Ian MacLaren

It is truly remarkable to me the number of people I know who are in pain. I’m not just talking about my counseling practice, where I expect to hear about difficulties and struggles; I’m talking about friends and […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:55-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, Soul Matters|Comments Off on The Walking Wounded – by Kate Ingram

Oh! Those Bowls – by Margaret Barnes

Speaking of Antiquing – October 2019

Yellowware is one of those items that branches off from the original and creates other categories to collect.

Yellowware did not limit its purposes to the functioning of a kitchen with bowls, pitchers, cups and tankards, cannisters, saltshakers and salt boxes, storage jars, molds, teapots and coffee pots, tableware and bakeware. […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:55-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, Speaking of Antiquing|Comments Off on Oh! Those Bowls – by Margaret Barnes

Private Loans – by Sandy J. Brown

On Real Estate & More – October 2019

Purchasing a home is typically one of the biggest investments in your lifetime and few people have the cash to purchase a home outright. One option that comes up occasionally, and can work well for everyone, is to get a private loan from a friend or family member. […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|Sandy J. Brown|Comments Off on Private Loans – by Sandy J. Brown

The Colors and Benefits of Autumn – by Adam Haynes

Love Your Landscape – October 2019

Jacksonville is one of the best locations in the Rogue Valley to enjoy the beauty of autumn.

If you have witnessed this stunning time of year in Jacksonville and taken in all the vivid colors of the season, you may have located a favorite tree or two. Maybe a tree in […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, Love Your Landscape|Comments Off on The Colors and Benefits of Autumn – by Adam Haynes

Thomas Fletcher Royal “Minister and Educator” – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

Pioneer Profiles – October 2019

Reverend Thomas Fletcher Royal, known as “Fletcher” to his family and “T.F.” to his friends, arrived with his family by wagon train in the Rogue Valley on October 27, 1853. Gold had been discovered on the banks of Rich Gulch the previous year, and hundreds of fortune seekers and riff raff […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, Pioneer Profiles|Comments Off on Thomas Fletcher Royal “Minister and Educator” – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

Representing ALL – by Mayor Paul Becker

A Few Minutes with the Mayor – October 2019

A prominent citizen visited my office recently to complain about a statement I made in one of my columns. The statement read, “It is the Constitution that holds our political parties in check. It stopped the Republicans from destroying President Truman. Today it is stopping the Democrats […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|A Few Minutes with the Mayor, Featured Stories|1 Comment

Once More Unto the Breach – by Paula & Terry Erdmann

The Unfettered Critic – October 2019

We’re back.

And so are they.

“We” being your Unfettered Critics. “They” being. . . well, we’ll get to them in a moment.

Some of you may have noticed (and we thank those of you who’ve stopped us on the street to say you had) that our column mysteriously went missing from recent […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, The Unfettered Critic|Comments Off on Once More Unto the Breach – by Paula & Terry Erdmann

BOW… BOW… – by Donna Briggs

News From Britt Hill – October 2019

I am dedicating this entire column to one man.

Dear Bow, this letter is one way of letting you know how much the Board, staff and most importantly, Britt Society Volunteers appreciate you.

Your tireless commitment as Britt’s House Manager over the past twelve years has been nothing short of extraordinary. […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, News From Britt Hill|Comments Off on BOW… BOW… – by Donna Briggs

Bill Brodie: Retired Dentist Remains a Positive Part of Jacksonville – by Mike McClain

Sensational Seniors – October 2019

This “Sensational Seniors” article features much-loved dentist, Bill Brodie, who retired in 2011 after 37 years of operating a dental clinic in Jacksonville. A native Oregonian, Bill was born on May 15, 1945 in the Belle Knife Hospital in Coquille, Oregon—a small hospital that his grandmother, a nurse, had started. While […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, Sensational Seniors|Comments Off on Bill Brodie: Retired Dentist Remains a Positive Part of Jacksonville – by Mike McClain

Here Comes the Hemp – by Graham Farran

Let’s Talk Real Estate – October 2019

In the last few months, we have seen an explosion of hemp fields being planted along every road you drive as hemp quickly becomes the largest agricultural crop, surpassing pears and vineyards, in Southern Oregon. Based upon statistics from the Oregon Department of Agriculture, Jackson County has 8,578 acres […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:56-07:00September 27th, 2019|Featured Stories, Let's Talk Real Estate|Comments Off on Here Comes the Hemp – by Graham Farran

Meet the Pioneers – by Peggy Dover

UPDATE: This event for 2019 is now SOLD OUT!

History buffs will be in their element when The Friends of Jacksonville’s Historic Cemetery once again present their annual fundraiser, Meet the Pioneers.

Beginning every fifteen minutes between 4-6:30pm, Friday and Saturday, October 4th and 5th, Jacksonville will be visited by representatives […]

By |2019-09-27T14:38:01-07:00September 5th, 2019|Event News, History News & Events, Now, Peggy Dover|Comments Off on Meet the Pioneers – by Peggy Dover

Welcome Fall with Oktoberfest at Schoolhaus Brewhaus! – by Peggy Dover

Frau Kemmling is ready to roll out the barrel(s) at Schoolhaus Brewhaus for their twelfth-annual Oktoberfest. She, along with her hardworking crew, will pack two weeks-worth of traditional German frivolity into one uber family-friendly afternoon. So, pull your dirndl out of hiding, and mark the calendar for Saturday, September 28, from noon-10:00pm, when the seven-acre campus comes alive with […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:57-07:00August 31st, 2019|Now, Peggy Dover|3 Comments

Billy’s Tale – by Michael Kell

A Cup of Conversation – September 2019

Mary and I spent a week in San Diego to participate in a “paddle out” celebrating her late brother Billy’s life. These things are always bittersweet. Bitter because loss is final, sweet because love left behind never expires.

Another brother-in-law, whom I treasure, […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:57-07:00August 31st, 2019|Cup of Conversation, Featured Stories|Comments Off on Billy’s Tale – by Michael Kell

Fired Up – by Kate Ingram

Soul Matters – September 2019

I am an incredible parent. I know this because there are moments in my parenting life where I stop and think, “Man, these kids are darned lucky.”

One of these moments happened this week. During a meeting at my children’s school my son was reminded […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:57-07:00August 31st, 2019|Featured Stories, Soul Matters|Comments Off on Fired Up – by Kate Ingram

So Tiny… They May Not be Seen – by Margaret Barnes

Speaking of Antiquing – September 2019

In the blue glass, front-locked cabinet are some very tiny objects. Made of glass, wrought iron, pewter, and clay, these items are for play and show. The glass figurines are handmade, perhaps in Murano, Italy, perhaps not. I see no maker’s marks on them, but they are […]

By |2019-09-16T10:11:56-07:00August 31st, 2019|Featured Stories, Speaking of Antiquing|Comments Off on So Tiny… They May Not be Seen – by Margaret Barnes

Conserving Water – by Sandy J. Brown

On Real Estate & More – September 2019

Water is a critical part of our way of life. Our economy, environment and our day-to-day lifestyle need water in order to flourish. But it’s a limited resource, and especially this time of year we need to rethink the way we […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:57-07:00August 31st, 2019|Featured Stories, Sandy J. Brown|Comments Off on Conserving Water – by Sandy J. Brown

Where Have all the Buyers Gone? – by Graham Farran

Let’s Talk Real Estate – September 2019

Southern Oregon has had a great summer with beautiful weather, lots of sunshine, and only two days of thunder storms that produced lots of rain but no significant forest fires. This beautiful weather usually brings lots of “out-of-state” home buyers, but this summer, home sales are […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:57-07:00August 31st, 2019|Featured Stories, Let's Talk Real Estate|Comments Off on Where Have all the Buyers Gone? – by Graham Farran

Doing More… – by Mayor Paul Becker

A Few Minutes with the Mayor – September 2019

Long, long ago there was a fellow named Charles Atlas. That wasn’t his real name, but it sounded good for a body-building guru which he certainly was. Everyone knew about him because his ads were everywhere… especially in comic books where they were […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:57-07:00August 29th, 2019|A Few Minutes with the Mayor, Featured Stories|Comments Off on Doing More… – by Mayor Paul Becker

Celebrate Woodstock at Hanley Farm – by Pam Sasseen

Focus on Hanley Farm – September 2019

Break out your love beads, head bands and bell bottom jeans for our September 8 celebration of Woodstock’s 50th anniversary at Hanley Farm. From 2:00-5:00pm, this will be the “far out” event of the summer! In addition to breaking out your bell bottoms and beads, don’t […]

By |2019-08-29T16:10:22-07:00August 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, Focus on Hanley Farm|Comments Off on Celebrate Woodstock at Hanley Farm – by Pam Sasseen

Peter Britt, Part 3 – “Photographer, Visionary, Entrepreneur” – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

Pioneer Profiles – September 2019

The past two Pioneer Profiles have partially explored the public persona of Peter Britt, the pioneer Swiss photographer famed for documenting Southern Oregon’s people, activities, and landscapes, and father of the region’s commercial orchard, wine, and ornamental horticulture industries. Britt also served two terms on the Town Council, was […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:58-07:00August 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, Pioneer Profiles|Comments Off on Peter Britt, Part 3 – “Photographer, Visionary, Entrepreneur” – by Carolyn Kingsnorth

Britt: More Than Concerts on the Hill – by Donna Briggs

News From Britt Hill – September 2019

My two young grandchildren joined me in July for the Britt Festival Orchestra’s presentations of “Peter and the Wolf” (retold with a delightful Southern Oregon twist) and the story of the “The Mountain that Loved a Bird” by composer Caroline Shaw. They were enthralled, including the […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:58-07:00August 29th, 2019|Featured Stories, News From Britt Hill|Comments Off on Britt: More Than Concerts on the Hill – by Donna Briggs

Music: A Family Reunion – by Frank De Luca

A few years ago, I learned a fancy word: ineffable. It is defined as “too great or extreme to be expressed or described in words,” as in the ineffable natural beauty of Crater Lake. Speechless is another way to say it. I have experienced this ineffability at the Britt Festival Orchestra concerts more than I can count. It […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:58-07:00August 2nd, 2019|News From Britt Hill, Now, Performing Arts|Comments Off on Music: A Family Reunion – by Frank De Luca

2019 Britt Season Updates

BFO August 4 Concert will be On the Hill at the Britt Pavilion

08/03/19 MEDFORD, OR — Based on weather/smoke forecasts and the improved AQI numbers in Jacksonville, the Britt Festival Orchestra performance scheduled for Sunday, August 4 will be held on the hill at the Britt Pavilion in Jacksonville. All regularly […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:58-07:00August 1st, 2019|News From Britt Hill, Now|Comments Off on 2019 Britt Season Updates

Britt Fine Arts Poster “Call to Artists” Announced

Submission period extended to August 15th!

Britt Music & Arts Festival has opened a Call to Artists for the 2020 Fine Arts Poster. Britt is also considering artists for the 2021 and 2022 seasons. The Call to Artists will be open until July 31st, 2019, and will be juried by […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:58-07:00July 16th, 2019|News From Britt Hill, Now, Performing Arts|Comments Off on Britt Fine Arts Poster “Call to Artists” Announced

Cooling Herbal Remedies for August – by Yvette Bedrossian

Eastern Medicine Connection – August 2019

While drinking ice cold fluids may feel refreshing, too much can be counterproductive. When the stomach is cooled, it has to work harder to produce the heat needed for normal digestion, resulting in heating-up the rest of the body. One antidote for this is to take ginger. […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:59-07:00August 2nd, 2019|Spa Jacksonville|Comments Off on Cooling Herbal Remedies for August – by Yvette Bedrossian

Where Your Best Yard Begins and Ends – by Adam Haynes

Love Your Landscape – August 2019

Now that summer is here, we can enjoy our outdoor areas where we’ve been investing our resources, creativity and personal style. And no one is happier about that than me.

For those whose outdoor living dreams have yet to be realized, there […]

By |2020-09-30T14:15:59-07:00August 2nd, 2019|Love Your Landscape|Comments Off on Where Your Best Yard Begins and Ends – by Adam Haynes
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