Dec 10, 2025
This week, Joanne welcomes
horticulturist Stephen Biggs back to the podcast to talk about his
latest project, the newly expanded Canada Gardener’s
Journal.
About
Steven
Steven was recognized by Garden
Making magazine as one of the “green gang” making a difference in
Canadian horticulture. His home-garden experiments span driveway
straw-bale gardens, a rooftop kitchen garden, fruit plantings, and
an edible-themed front yard. He’s a horticulturist, award-winning
broadcaster and author, and former horticulture instructor with
George Brown and Durham Colleges in Ontario, Canada. His other
books include Grow Olives Where You Think You Can't,
Grow Lemons Where You Think You Can’t, Growing
Figs in Cold Climates, Grow Figs Where You Think You
Can’t, and No-Guff Gardening, available
at foodgardenlife.com.
Tune in to learn more
about Canada Gardener's Journal.
Origins of the
Gardener’s Journal
- Started
34 years ago by Margaret Bennett Alder
- Inspired by her father’s paper booklets he used
to manage tasks and meds
- Margaret used the format to track garden tasks,
neat plant sources, and observations
- First
year: ~50 copies printed; grew to 500 the next year
- By the
25th edition (2017), and her retirement at age 90, over 18,000
copies sold
- Margaret passed away at 98; the journal is part
of her gardening legacy
Evolution of the
Journal
- Originally the Toronto Gardener’s Journal, then
the Toronto & Golden Horseshoe Gardener’s Journal
- Taken
over by Helen and Sarah Battersby (TorontoGardens.com), who
expanded its geographic scope and won awards
- Now
passed to Stephen, who has turned it into Canada’s Gardener’s
Journal
What’s New in Canada’s
Gardener’s Journal
- Now
Canada-wide and bilingual, with information relevant across the
country
- Includes average first and last frost dates
using the most recent Environment Canada data
- Expanded sources list featuring Canadian
suppliers that ship across the country (seeds, nursery stock,
etc.)
- Ongoing
plan to update sources as new nurseries and seed companies are
suggested
From Toronto-specific to
Seasonal Tasks
- Old
version: weekly tasks tied to the Toronto area and similar
zones
- New
version: season-based task lists (spring, summer, fall,
winter)
- Includes outdoor tasks and indoor prep (seed
starting, planning, etc.)
- Better
suited to different climates and zones across Canada (and similar
U.S. regions)
Perpetual Calendar
Format
- Previously: a dated, year-specific planner
(e.g., 2024, 2025) with fixed calendar weeks
- Now: a
perpetual, undated week-by-week layout
- Gardeners can start using it at any point in the
year
- Can
stretch use over more than one year if desired
- Focuses
on periods of active gardening rather than wasting pages in
off-months
Practical, Hands-On
Focus
- Designed by a gardener for gardeners—light on
theory, heavy on practical prompts
- Space
for gardeners to record:
- What
they planted and when
- Weather
patterns and unusual seasons
- Successes, failures, and plant
sources
- Acts as
both a planner and a historical record for future
decision-making
Why Garden Journaling
Matters
- Memory
is unreliable: gardeners quickly forget how wet/cool or hot/dry a
season actually was
- Notes
and photos together help explain:
- Why
certain plants thrived or struggled
- How
changing climate and shifting zones affect timing and plant
choices
- Useful
for:
- Answering client questions (for designers like
Joanne)
- Tracking long-term trends in weather and
performance
- Diagnosing issues (e.g., why tomatoes didn’t
ripen as usual)
Climate Change & Updated
Data
- Growing
zones and frost patterns are shifting with climate
change
- The
journal uses the latest Environment Canada frost-date
data
- Stephen
expects ongoing updates in future editions as data and climate
continue to change
- Honouring Founder Margaret Bennett
Alder
- Margaret was passionate about a plant-based
diet, which she linked to her longevity
- The
journal has long included pages of her favourite plant-based
resources
- Stephen
has expanded this section with new Canadian sources in her
honour
Availability &
Price
- Price:
$19.95 – positioned as an affordable gift or stocking
stuffer
- Available via foodgardenlife.com
under the books section
- Some
specialty garden retailers carry it; retailers are listed on the
website
- Stephen
encourages buyers (especially Christmas shoppers) to email him via
the site if they’re unsure about shipping timelines
- Although now truly Canada-wide, gardeners in
northern U.S. border states with similar zones may also find it
very useful
Check out Stephen’s books and
Canada’s Gardener’s Journal on foodgardenlife.com. You can also find @foodgardenlife on
YouTube.
Resources Mentioned in
the Show:
Down the Garden Path: A
Step-By-Step Guide to Your Ontario Garden
Are you a landscape or
gardening expert?
We'd love to have you on the
show! Click here to learn
more.
Find Down the Garden
Path on Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube:
@downthegardenpathpodcast.
Down the Garden Path
Podcast
On Down The Garden Path, professional
landscape designer Joanne Shaw discusses
down-to-earth tips and advice for your plants, gardens and
landscapes. As the owner of Down2Earth Landscape Design,
Joanne Shaw has been designing beautiful gardens for homeowners
east of Toronto for over a decade. She does her best to bring you
interesting, relevant and useful topics to help you keep your
garden as low-maintenance as possible.
In Down the Garden Path: A
Step-By-Step Guide to Your Ontario Garden, Joanne and
fellow landscape designer Matthew Dressing distill their
horticultural and design expertise and their combined experiences
in helping others create and maintain thriving gardens into one
easy-to-read monthly reference guide. Get your copy today on
Amazon. Don't forget to check
out Down the Garden Path on your
favourite podcast app and subscribe! You can now catch the podcast
on YouTube.