Incorrect gardening information is not just an editorial problem — it wastes gardeners’ time and money, harms plants, and in some cases poses real risks to human health and local ecosystems. TN Garden Tips treats factual accuracy as a core editorial obligation, not an afterthought.
“We’d rather publish less and be right than publish more and lead a gardener astray. Every piece of advice on TN has been verified before it reaches your garden.”
Scope
TN Garden Tips’ fact-checking standards apply to all editorial content, including:
- Planting guides, growing calendars, and zone-specific advice
- Plant care instructions (watering, fertilizing, pruning, repotting)
- Soil composition ratios, pH recommendations, and amendment guides
- Pest and disease identification and treatment recommendations
- Plant toxicity and safety claims
- Product reviews and tool recommendations
- Scientific plant names (binomial nomenclature) and taxonomy
- USDA hardiness zone data and seasonal planting windows
Our Verification Process
- Claim identification— Every factual claim in a submitted article is flagged during the editorial review process, including planting dates, care ratios, zone ranges, and product specifications.
- Primary source verification— Flagged claims are verified against primary horticultural sources: peer-reviewed journals, USDA plant databases, university cooperative extension publications, Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) references, or direct consultation with certified horticulturalists.
- Regional cross-check— Zone-specific claims are cross-referenced against USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map data and regional cooperative extension guides to ensure accuracy across U.S. growing regions.
- Expert review for specialist topics— Articles covering soil science, plant disease, organic pest management, or plant toxicology are reviewed by a subject-matter expert before publication.
- Editorial sign-off— All verified claims are reviewed by the Head Horticulturalist or senior editor before publication approval.
Source Hierarchy
- Tier 1 — Primary: Peer-reviewed horticultural and botanical journals, USDA Plant Database, university cooperative extension publications, official plant toxicity registries (ASPCA, FDA)
- Tier 2 — Secondary: Established horticultural institutions (RHS, AHS, botanical gardens), Master Gardener program publications, recognized garden encyclopedias
- Tier 3 — Supporting: Reputable garden writers with verifiable credentials, corroborated by multiple Tier 1 or Tier 2 sources
Handling Conflicting Horticultural Advice
Gardening science evolves. When credible sources present conflicting advice — such as differing watering frequencies or competing soil amendment recommendations — TN presents the range of evidence and, where possible, indicates which approach is most broadly supported. We do not present a single view as definitive when legitimate expert disagreement exists.
Report a Concern
If you believe a TN Garden Tips article contains incorrect horticultural information, please contact [email protected]. Include the article URL, the specific claim you believe is inaccurate, and a supporting source. All credible reports are reviewed within 48 hours.