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This week, Ken Lain, The Mountain Gardener of Prescott, shares the ultimate guide to garden savings. Learn 10 ideas for less expensive gardening, dream gardens for the frugal gardener, and more.

Woman working in garden filled with healthy purple and pink flowers, and bright green shrubbery and plants. A blue watering can sits in the foreground next to her.

Gardening is a hobby, and like all hobbies, it’s easy to get carried away beyond hobby-budgeted funds. Even after you have the necessary tools and supplies, there are always new plants, hats, gloves, and new gadgets to try! But that doesn’t mean your garden has to drain your wallet. Some of the best garden tips don’t cost a dime, while some save you money for many seasons. Here are my no-pain-always-gain ways to save money while gardening and still have the garden of your dreams.

Make Compost Happen

Hands holding composted soil and vegetation in a compost bin.

It’s so obvious that our current gardens are free compost goldmines. But, incredibly, many gardeners let this mother lode go to waste. Stop bagging those needles and leaves and dragging them to the curb in the fall! Dried leaves make an excellent compost in as little as one season. Half-rotted leaves are called “leaf mulch,” and there is nothing like a layer of leaf mulch on your garden to attract earthworms and all kinds of beneficial insects and organisms. That’s what happens naturally in the forest, and it’s much cheaper than buying bags of shredded cedar bark.

Start Your Plants from Seed

Hands planting seeds into seed tray filled with soil.

Seeds are still the best deal in town. You can grow dozens of annual plants for a fraction of what you would pay for a 6-pack of the same flowers. Begin with annual flower and vegetable seeds, or start a patch of wildflowers. The savings from growing vegetables from seed can pay for the rest of your garden supplies!

Install a Drip Irrigation System

Drip irrigation in the garden. A pool of water fills in space at the base of a plant.

This is a dramatic money saver, even if you only pay for electricity to pump from a well. Irrigation systems are composed of a lot of little pieces, making them seem very complicated and expensive, when they really are neither. All those pieces simply snap together as you lay out your system in the garden/landscape. Even drip irrigation that is programmed to go on several times a day will use less water and money than a good soaking with a hose. That’s because less water is lost to evaporation, and less water is consumed because what is used is going straight to the roots. You save money, and your plants are happily hydrated.

Collect Seed, Take Cuttings, Divide, Spread

Woman holding a jar with a propagated philodendron.

Take seed-starting a step further and become a seed saver. Open-pollinated plants grow true from their seed. Heirlooms and old-fashioned flowers are good candidates. You can also multiply your plants by rooting cuttings and by dividing perennials from friends’ and/or your own landscapes.

Yard Sales

Gardening tools and gloves set in a brown wicker basket. Tools have green handles.

Some of your neighbors stopped gardening years ago, and when they finally clean out their garages, you can find some deals. Many of the older tools, buckets, netting, pots, and gloves are better quality than the imported stuff offered at today’s big-box stores. Once all this used garden equipment has been found and set up in the driveway, no one wants to drag it back into the garage to store it until the next sale, so prices are usually pretty reasonable, even negotiable. But, hold on! Maybe YOU should be the one having a yard sale. I mean, really, how many pruners do you need, anyway? Have a yard sale and designate the proceeds to your garden fund.

Collect and Re-Direct Rain

Rainwater collection tank, woman filling watering can with water from tank.

Water is one of those garden expenses we don’t really notice until the bill arrives at the end of the month. Yet a garden can go without water for a long time. A rain barrel has got to be one of the most natural garden tools to use. You insert your drainpipe into the hole in the barrel and wait for rain. They’re making it even more tempting these days with some beautiful rain barrels designed to complement the different materials of different house styles.

Fall Plant Sales at Your Garden Center

Young couple shopping in garden center with lots of flowers on display.

You can save a lot of money at garden centers during the transition from the summer to the autumn planting season. Fall’s colored trees, big bold evergreens, and autumn-blooming shrubs arrive as specimen plants, and they take up a lot of space at a garden center. Just imagine a 15′ by 8′ wide Colorado spruce, and you get the picture. Well, we had an entire truckload of trees show up, filled with just such trees!

To make room for fall shipments, garden centers host clearance sales of their spring and summer plants. This is a great time to snag bargains at half price or less. At my garden center, we call this our Monster Monsoon Sale, but it can also be called a Fabulous Fall sale, end-of-season bargains, and more. This transition has already begun and continues into September. Snap up these bargains fast because they don’t last long! It’s a good time to take home that piece of pottery, garden art, or plants for that privacy hedge you otherwise just couldn’t afford!

Free Garden Classes Every Saturday at Watters Garden Center

Join us every Saturday morning at 9:30 AM for our free garden classes, right here at Watters Garden Center on Iron Springs Road in Prescott. August is packed with valuable insights to help your garden thrive!

August 30 @ 9:30 Best Plants for Pollinators in Prescott – Want to transform your garden into a vibrant haven for hummingbirds and delicate butterflies? It’s easier than you think! By selecting the right plants and providing a few key elements, you can enjoy the delightful flutter and buzz of these winged wonders right in your own backyard.

September 6 @ 9:30 – Fast Vines for Quick Garden Coverage – Tired of bare spots and want to add some vertical interest with ease? We share champion climbers and fantastic fillers – easy-to-grow vines and groundcovers that thrive right here. Imagine vibrant vines scrambling up your pergola, creating cool shade, or a lush carpet of groundcover suppressing weeds and holding our precious soils.

September 13 @ 9:30 – Unbreakable Plants for Prescott Gardens – Ever dream of a garden that looks fantastic no matter the season, without being a constant chore? This class we share eight of our toughest, most reliable plants that thrive in Arizona gardens and offer beauty through spring blooms, summer foliage, fall color, and even winter interest.

Come learn something new and connect with fellow gardeners!

Until next week, I’ll be here at Watters Garden Center helping locals snag big garden savings.

This article was written by Ken Lain. He can be found throughout the week at Watters Garden Center, 1815 W. Iron Springs Rd in Prescott, or contacted through his website at WattersGardenCenter.com.

Get more gardening tips from Watters Garden Center in the Mountain Gardener Column on Signals A Z.com.

Watters Garden Center Logo in sunflower cutout.

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