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Tech Moves: Former Microsoft CVP joins Amazon; Chronus names CEO; REI hires AI leader

21 January 2026 at 13:50
Jigar Thakkar. (LinkedIn Photo)

Jigar Thakkar is now vice president of Amazon Quick Suite, a platform that uses agentic AI to automate business workflows, research and data access. Amazon launched the tool in October 2025.

Thakkar is returning to Seattle after more than seven years at New York-based financial services firm MSCI, where he worked as chief technology officer and head of engineering.

Before MSCI, Thakkar spent nearly two decades at Microsoft where he was the founding engineering leader of Microsoft Teams and held the title of corporate VP. He joined the tech giant in 1999 as a software developer on the Microsoft Money team.

“I’m excited about Jigar’s customer-centric approach and ability to scale transformative products, his passion for agent technology, and his experience building platforms that serve millions of users,” said Swami Sivasubramanian, VP of agentic AI at AWS, in announcing the news.

Sara Vaezy. (LinkedIn Photo)

Sara Vaezy joined healthcare consulting firm Chartis as chief product and technology officer. Vaezy previously spent nearly a decade at Providence, where she was chief transformation officer with the Renton, Wash.-based multi-state healthcare provider.

This is Vaezy’s second stint at Chartis — she previously worked at the Chicago-based company from 2010 to 2015.

“We viscerally know the healthcare system is broken and needs to change. Clinicians are overburdened, patient care isn’t always well coordinated or affordable, and costs continue to increase unsustainably,” Vaezy wrote on LinkedIn. “This is an opportunity to help Chartis navigate a landscape that’s rapidly changing and actually do something about it, along with clients.”

Vaezy is also a clinical assistant professor at the University of Washington’s School of Public Health.

Niki Hall, left, and Kelli Dragovich. (Supio Photos)

— After raising $60 million last year, legal-tech startup Supio has named two new executives:

  • Niki Hall is now chief marketing officer, joining the Seattle-based company from Five9, a startup that helps brands connect with customers. She was previously CMO at the French startup Contentsquare. 
  • Kelli Dragovich, who has worked in HR for more than two decades, has taken the role of chief people officer. Dragovich was mostly recently CPO at Pendo and has served in leadership at companies including Google, GitHub, Yahoo, Intuit, Quizlet and others.
Ankur Ahlowalia. (Chronus Photo)

Chronus named Ankur Ahlowalia as CEO of the Seattle-based mentoring software platform.

“I’m delighted to lead a company that has pioneered mentoring software and is now leveraging artificial intelligence to make mentorship more accessible, personalized, and impactful for all employees,” Ahlowalia said in statement.

Ahlowalia joins Chronus from the Dallas-based software company Korbyt, which he led for more than five years.

Variant Bio has appointed Dr. Craig Basson as chief medical officer and president of research and development. The Seattle-based drug discovery company is working with genetically diverse populations globally to develop new therapies.

Craig Basson. (Variant Bio Photo)

“Craig’s career uniquely spans deep human genetics, rigorous clinical science, and successful drug development at scale,” said Andrew Farnum, Variant’s CEO. “His leadership and experience translating genetic insights into medicines will be instrumental as we move our programs into the clinic.”

Basson has worked for more than 25 years biotech and academia. He joins Variant from Bitterroot Bio, which is focused on using immunotherapy to treat cardiovascular disease. Other past roles include leadership at Boston Pharmaceuticals and Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research and instructional roles at Harvard Medical School and Weill Cornell Medical College.

Larry Colagiovanni. (LinkedIn Photo)

— Longtime Seattle-area tech leader Larry Colagiovanni is now leading AI product innovation at outdoor gear retailer REI. Colagiovanni’s career has included multiple stints at Microsoft, most recently as lead of product vision and strategy for Microsoft Shopping where he launched the company’s first conversational shopping assistant.

Other past roles include partner at Madrona Venture Labs, C-suite roles at Limeade, and leadership titles at eBay and Decide.

Colagiovanni said on LinkedIn that the role “brings together my passion for the outdoors with my belief in human-centered AI that supports better discovery, decision-making, and experiences.”

Diego Oppenheimer is now an executive fellow with the Stanford University Graduate School of Business. The serial entrepreneur founded Algorithmia, which was acquired by DataRobot.

“Couldn’t be more excited to continue helping to build companies, invest in founders, and now helping shape the next generation of AI-native entrepreneurs,” he said on LinkedIn.

Smarsh, a Portland, Ore., company that helps customers manage their business communications to identify regulatory and reputational risks, announced multiple leadership changes:

  • Ian Goodkind is now chief financial officer after previously working as CFO of Jamf where he successfully led the organization through its 2020 initial public offering.
  • Kamesh Tumsi is chief product officer, joining from HealthEquity where he was senior VP and head of product.
  • Goutam Nadella, former CPO at Smarsh, is now the chief strategy officer.

Northwest Quantum Nexus (NQN), a group supporting quantum research and innovation across Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana, named three leaders serving in a volunteer-capacity to spearhead its transition from an informal partnership into a formalized organization:

  • Joseph Williams is executive director, having served as an NQN co-founder and co-chair. Williams was previously the interim director of the Washington State Broadband Office within the Department of Commerce. Williams has held various leadership positions for government agencies.
  • Charles Marcus, a University of Washington physics professor who holds the Boeing Johnson Endowed Chair in Materials Science and Engineering, will serve as NQN chief scientist.
  • Arry Yu is now NQN’s director of external affairs. Yu co-founded the Cascadia Blockchain Council, established the U.S. Blockchain Coalition, and was on the board of the Washington Technology Industry Association (WTIA).

Sarah Clifthorne is now interim director of the Washington State Department of Commerce as a permanent leader is being sought. Gov. Bob Ferguson appointed Clifthorne to the role following the recent resignation of Joe Nguyễn.

Clifthorne has served as deputy director at Commerce since February 2025 and was previously a policy director with the Washington State Senate. She has also worked in union leadership.

Rachel Fukaya is now vice president of marketing at Textio, the Seattle startup that helps companies write job listings and other communications. Fukaya has been with Textio for more the two years and previously worked at multiple public relations companies. She was formerly VP of PR at Walker Sands.

Stephan Delano (LinkedIn Photo)

Stephen Delano is now principal software engineer at Seattle’s Yoodli, an AI roleplay startup recently landed a $40 million investment.

Delano joins Yoodli after five years at Tomo, a digital mortgage startup launched by former Zillow executives, where he was a founding engineer.

He previously spent more than a decade at Chef, a Seattle-based automation technology company that was acquired in 2020 for $220 million.

— Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson is replacing Seattle City Light CEO and general manager Dawn Lindell. The new mayor has selected Dennis McLerran, the former U.S. Environmental Protection Agency head for the Pacific Northwest region, for the role pending confirmation by the Seattle City Council. Lindell served as CEO for two years.

Wilson on Wednesday announced additional leadership changes within the City of Seattle with the selection of these acting directors:

  • Quynh Pham at the Department of Neighborhoods
  • Amy Nguyen at the Office of Arts and Culture
  • Beto Yarce at the Office of Economic Development
  • Lylianna Allala at the Office of Sustainability and the Environment

Daryl Fairweather, chief economist for the real estate platform Redfin, joined the board of governors of Center for Land Economics. The education and research organization promotes equitable land and property assessments.

WestRiver Group announced that Craig Lange has joined the Seattle-based firm as managing director and lead of the Disruptive Growth Fund. Lange spent more than three decades with the heavy machinery company Caterpillar.

January Grilling Recipes for Cold Weather Cooking

2 January 2026 at 06:00

Happy New Year from Steven and the team at Barbecuebible.com!

Whew… The holidays are finally in the rear view mirror, giving us a chance to relax and reboot.

Once you’re rested, we hope you’ll feel inspired to shovel a path to your grill (if needed) and try the tantalizing recipes we’ve culled from our voluminous files. Most are not only heathy-ish (Candied Bacon Sundaes excepted) but relatively cost-conscious. Enjoy!

January Grilling Recipes

The Caribou (Hot Mulled Wine)

Ah, the joys of taping a barbecue TV show in Quebec in the snow! One morning (In May, no less) Steven and his film crew awoke to three inches of snow. So they did what any practical Quebecer would do—a fortified themselves with a local cold weather pick-me-up called the Caribou. You start with hot mulled wine, which you reinforce with brandy. It just may be one of the reasons French Canadians not only tolerate winter, weather but welcome it. Bring it on!

mulled wine

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Kansas City Baby Back Ribs with Lemon Brown Sugar Barbecue Sauce

This recipe, designed to serve 4 to 8, transforms humble racks of baby back ribs into a symphony of flavors and textures. The meticulous preparation involves liberally coating the ribs with your favorite barbecue rub, followed by a slow and tantalizing smoke at 275 degrees. The pièce de résistance comes in the form of our signature lemon-infused brown sugar barbecue sauce, applied generously in the final moments of cooking. As the ribs hit the grill, the sauce caramelizes to perfection, delivering a harmonious blend of smokiness, sweetness, and citrusy brightness. Get ready to savor the essence of Kansas City barbecue with each succulent, finger-licking bite.

Baby back ribs

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Pa Am Tomàquet

At its most rudimentary, this simple bread appetizer, pa amb tomàquet, consists simply of a slice of grilled bread rubbed with ripe tomatoes and drizzled with olive oil. Like all simple dishes, it requires the best raw materials: crusty country-style bread; squishily ripe tomatoes; fragrant, cold-pressed olive oil. When prepared properly, the bread will be crisp from grilling, but the surface will be just beginning to soften thanks to the juices from the tomatoes. Try it for breakfast!

Pa Amb Tomaquet

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Loco Moco

Hamburger, fried egg, white rice, and instant gravy may not sound like a formula for gustatory wonderment. But for many Hawaiians, loco moco (for that’s what they call this inexpensive and rib-sticking combination) is the ultimate comfort food, equally welcome at breakfast, lunch, dinner, or as a midnight snack.

Loco Moco

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Mexican Fish Tacos

Though originally deep-fried in the taco shacks of the Baja Peninsula, grilled fish is superior in terms of taste, and healthier, too. We call for grouper or mahi-mahi, but other fresh fish fillets will work, too. Serve with a chilled Mexican beer or a margarita and pretend you’re spending the New Year south of the border!

Mexican Fish Tacos with Cilantro Butter

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Thai Grilled Beef Salad

This electrifying beef salad is one of the glories of Thai cuisine: all fresh herbs and chili hellfire. We’re going to give it a smoky dimension by grilling the beef over cherry wood. You don’t normally think of barbecue as health food, but the high proportion of vegetables to this intensely flavored steak definitely makes for healthy eating.

Thai Grilled Beef Salad

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Tex-Mex Turkey Burgers

The turkey burger arose in an effort to enjoy the lusciousness of a hamburger with the clean conscience that comes with eating low-cholesterol and lowfat meat. These turkey burgers light up your mouth with chile powder, jalapeño pepper, and cilantro. In keeping with the Tex-Mex theme, serve the burgers on flour tortillas along with avocado and slivered jicama.

TURKEY BURGER Recipe

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Buccaneer Chicken

You’ve heard of pirates called “buccaneers.” What you may not realize is that they take their name from the French-Caribbean word for smoke, boucane. That’s the origin of this dish, Buccaneer Chicken, and it uses a smoking fuel that may surprise you: sugar cane. The result is a much herbaceous, lighter-smoked flavor.

Buccaneer Chicken

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Buffaque Broccoli

Feeling a little vegetable-starved in the wake of the holidays? This impressive-looking dish can be served as an appetizer or side dish. Grilled broccoli is a revelation, a riff on Buffalo, New York’s, namesake dish.

Buffaque Broccoli with Blue cheese drizzle

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Candied Bacon Sundaes

Here’s a dessert based on the assumption that everything tastes better with bacon—even dessert. It pays homage to Steven’s friends in Quebec (where he taped his Maître du Grill TV show), offering a triple blast of maple flavor in the form of maple-glazed bacon, maple ice cream, and maple whipped cream.

Bacon Sundaes

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Cold weather doesn’t mean the grill goes into hibernation. A little planning, the right recipes, and a willingness to cook through the chill can turn January into one of the most satisfying months to barbecue. Whether you’re leaning into lighter, healthier meals or just looking for something comforting that still tastes like fire and smoke, there’s plenty here to keep things interesting.

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The post January Grilling Recipes for Cold Weather Cooking appeared first on Barbecuebible.com.

Is Stevens Pass open? Snowboarding software engineer builds simple site to answer big winter question

24 December 2025 at 16:43
Stevens Pass ski resort has been unable to open due to poor weather and road conditions. (GeekWire File Photo / Kurt Schlosser)

Anxious skiers and snowboarders refreshing social media and other websites for updates on Washington’s Stevens Pass have a new tool to track the resort’s delayed opening: a streamlined status page built by a snowboarding software engineer.

Matheus Gonçalves, a 25-year tech veteran, started snowboarding about five years ago. He’s been a pass holder at Stevens since he learned to ride, and like many winter sports enthusiasts, he’s been watching and waiting as the region recovers from extreme rainfall and flooding.

Posting on Reddit as @toadgeek, Gonçalves said he created his simple website as a one-stop update spot for Stevens and U.S. Highway 2 because he “got tired of playing browser tab whack a mole” while seeking information.

“For those of us who rely on snow sports as a physical activity, winter mental health and happiness outlet, the uncertainty and closures have been frustrating,” Gonçalves told GeekWire via email.

He acknowledged that anyone feeling anxious or impatient about getting to the mountain should remember all that has happened this month.

“The region has dealt with serious weather impacts, including flooding, landslides, and road washouts,” Gonçalves said. “WSDOT crews have been working hard to keep people safe and restore access. They are the highest priority now.”

The status for Stevens Pass ski resort on Wednesday afternoon. (stevenspass.info screen grab)

While the weather dealt a blow to openings at other Washington resorts, the prospects for the season at Stevens have looked especially dire because of flood damage on Highway 2.

In an Instagram post on Wednesday, Stevens, which is owned by Vail Resorts, said the mountain has “received a good amount of snow” and is “working through intermittent power outages.” The resort added that it’s “encouraged by the recent updates from WSDOT.”

The delay has sparked friction over Vail’s refund policies. In another Instagram post, the resort noted that passes remain non-refundable because they are valid all season. “Our Epic Coverage refund policy does not extend to road or traffic challenges,” the resort stated.

Gonçalves said it’s important to remember that beyond the road repairs and broader weather impacts, “opening dates can swing a lot year to year, and this kind of timing is not unheard of.”

Seattle tech worker and snowboarder Matheus Gonçalves took up the sport about five years ago. Photo courtesy of Matheus Gonçalves)

Gonçalves built his website to provide a data-driven answer without predictions. It pulls road status from WSDOT public APIs, pulls resort operations from Stevens Pass official pages, and loosely uses official social accounts only as secondary confirmation.

He’s been iterating after hours, keeping it intentionally simple, with a cache that refreshes every 20 minutes. He plans to add small context improvements like separate eastbound and westbound road status, clearer timestamps, and maybe some direct links back to each official source. He also might add a minimal weather station snapshot and links out to NOAA forecasts. He plans to keep the site up after everything opens.

Gonçalves isn’t alone in coding for the community. Another snowboarder on Reddit, OtoNoOto, highlighted a site called Stevens Pass Companion that shares similar information and plans to expand to data on all Washington resorts.

For Gonçalves, who grew up surfing and skateboarding in Brazil before moving to the U.S. more than a decade ago, the project is about maximizing a fleeting season.

“Snow is unbeatable,” he said. “I’m not getting any younger, so I’m going to make the best of every season I can for as long as my body allows.”

NASA’s IMAP Mission Captures ‘First Light,’ Looks Back at Earth 

16 December 2025 at 09:30

3 min read

NASA’s IMAP Mission Captures ‘First Light,’ Looks Back at Earth 

All 10 instruments aboard NASA’s newly launched IMAP (Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe) mission have successfully recorded their first measurements in space. With these “first light” observations, the spacecraft is now collecting preliminary science data as it journeys to its observational post at Lagrange point 1 (L1), about 1 million miles from Earth toward the Sun. 

“We are extremely pleased with the initial in-flight performance of the IMAP mission. All instruments have successfully powered on and our commissioning remains on track. We have already collected useful data including exercising our near-real-time space weather data stream,” said Brad Williams, IMAP program executive at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “This successful milestone is quickly setting the stage for the start of our primary science operations.”

As a modern-day celestial cartographer, IMAP will chart the boundaries of the heliosphere — a huge bubble created by the Sun’s wind that encapsulates our entire solar system — and study how the heliosphere interacts with the local galactic neighborhood beyond.

To map the heliosphere’s boundaries, IMAP is equipped with three instruments that measure energetic neutral atoms: IMAP-Lo, IMAP-Hi, and IMAP-Ultra. These uncharged particles, called ENAs for short, are cosmic messengers formed at the heliosphere’s edge that allow scientists to study the boundary region and its variability from afar. 

An animated GIF shows a large oval that is initially filled with large rectangular pixels of different colors from dark blue, light blue, green, yellow, orange, red, and pink. The pixels change color rapidly. The oval then goes from filled to only having two large vertical bands of colored pixels and then two thinner vertical bands of pixels, with the rest of the oval becoming gray, with no data. At the center of the oval a white dot is labeled
These partial maps of the heliosphere’s boundaries were compiled from first-light data from the IMAP-Hi, IMAP-Lo, and IMAP-Ultra instruments. These initial looks offer a first glimpse at the detail NASA’s IMAP (Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe) will be able to capture. The warmer colors show regions with more energetic neutral atoms (ENAs).
NASA

“It’s just astounding that within the first couple weeks of observations, we see such clear and consistent ENA data across the factor of 10,000 in energy covered collectively by the three imagers,” said David McComas, Princeton University professor and principal investigator for the IMAP mission. “This, plus excellent first light data from all seven of the other instruments, makes for a 10 out of 10, A-plus start to the mission.”

As IMAP travelled away from Earth, the IMAP-Ultra instrument looked back at the planet and picked up ENAs created by Earth’s magnetic environment. These terrestrially made ENAs, which overwhelm ENAs coming from the heliosphere in sheer numbers, is a reason why IMAP will be stationed at L1. There the spacecraft will have an unobstructed view of ENAs coming from the heliosphere’s boundaries.

An elongated, horizontal colorized map shows rectangular pixels of different colors, mostly blue and green but dominated by a large circular feature in red, orange, and yellow on the far left. The background is mostly blue but two large swatches of green appear near the top center and bottom center.
Earth’s magnetic environment can be seen glowing bright in this image taken by the IMAP-Ultra instrument, which includes ENA data as well as noise. Earth sits at the center of the red donut-shaped structure. This image was taken as IMAP left Earth for its post at Lagrange point 1.
NASA

The mission will also study the solar wind, a continuous flow of charged particles coming from the Sun. Solar wind observations from five of IMAP’s instruments will be used by the IMAP Active Link for Real-Time (I-ALiRT) system to provide roughly a half hour’s warning to voyaging astronauts and spacecraft near Earth about harmful space weather and radiation coming their way. The IMAP instruments are already making near-real-time solar wind measurements that can be used to support space weather forecasts. The I-ALiRT network is being exercised and will be ready for space weather forecasters when IMAP starts its regular science mission at L1.

With all of IMAP’s instruments up and running, the mission has nearly completed its commissioning stage and will arrive at L1 in early January. The mission is now working to complete the final commissioning steps and instrument calibration with the goal of being ready to take operational science data starting Saturday, Feb. 1, 2026. 

Here’s a look at IMAP’s instruments and what they’ve seen in their first-light observations.

A square image is mottled with black and blue pixels with an elongated oval-shaped feature in light blue, green, yellow, and orange at the bottom left. In the upper right is a smaller box around two smaller elongated streaks in green.
IMAP-Lo, IMAP-Hi, and IMAP-Ultra
The three ENA (energetic neutral atom) instruments, IMAP-Lo, IMAP-Hi, and IMAP-Ultra, will help construct maps of the boundaries of the heliosphere, which will advance our understanding of how the solar wind interacts with our local galaxy. The green streak in this image from IMAP-Hi shows the instrument’s ability to separate ENAs from other particles such as cosmic rays (green and yellow blob).
NASA
Four rectangular charts show graphs with blue lines that have small vertical variations on the left and middle but significantly large variations on the right.
MAG
The magnetometer instrument measures magnetic fields from the Sun that stretch across the solar system. Its first-light data clearly shows dynamic changes in the solar wind’s magnetic field due to a shockwave created by the solar wind (squiggles at right).
NASA
A graph shows lines in a rainbow of colors, from dark blue to green to yellow to red, each line with two peaks near the center.
SWAPI
The Solar Wind and Pickup Ions (SWAPI) instrument measures ions from the solar wind and charged particles from beyond the solar system. Initial data from SWAPI showed a change in the composition of the solar wind over one day. This image shows particles from a coronal mass ejection on Nov. 11 and 12, 2025.
NASA
A chart shows several blobs of color that are circled in black. They are labeled from top to bottom as Fe, Ne-Si, O, He, and H.
CoDICE
The Compact Dual Ion Composition Experiment (CoDICE) instrument measures ions from the solar wind and charged particles from beyond the solar system. It detected different types of oxygen, hydrogen, and helium atoms in its first-light data.
NASA
Scatter plot with logarithmic axes showing particle distributions labeled as Electrons, Hydrogen, Helium, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Neon, Magnesium, Silicon, and Iron, with denser blue points at lower energies.
HIT
The High-energy Ion Telescope (HIT) measures energetic ions and electrons from the Sun. Early ion data shows the common elements up through iron.
NASA
A graph shows a black curved line with four peaks. The first peak on the left is labeled Comet C/2025 K1 (Atlas). The second peak is labeled alpha Leo. The third peak is labeled kappa Vel b01Car iCar. The fourth, much taller peak on the far right has no label. The vertical axis is labeled photon flux and the horizontal axis is labeled spin angle.
GLOWS
Unlike other IMAP instruments that study particles, the GLObal Solar Wind Structure (GLOWS) instrument images ultraviolet light called the helioglow that is created in part by the solar wind. The first data taken with GLOWS showed helioglow and bright stars, matching scientists’ expectations for the instrument. Unexpectedly, the signature of comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS), shown by the first small bump from the left in the image, was also seen before it disappeared from GLOWS’ view.
NASA
A rectangular chart shows bands of colors from red at the bottom to yellow, green, blue, and purple at the top. On the right side of the image, the red and yellow extend vertically upward into the yellow and green bands. The vertical axis is labeled Energy and the horizontal axis is labeled with the dates October 11, October 12, and October 13 from left to right.
SWE
As its name suggests, the Solar Wind Electron (SWE) instrument measures electrons from the solar wind. In its first data collection, SWE successfully captured electrons at a range of energy levels. On Nov. 12, a solar storm passed through the solar system and SWE captured the resulting spike in the number of electrons at each energy level.
NASA
A graph shows a blue line with several spikes labeled with different atoms. From left to right the peaks are labeled C, O, Mg, Si, and H2S. The vertical axis is labeled Signal, while the horizontal axis is labeled Mass.
IDEX
The Interstellar Dust Experiment (IDEX) measures cosmic dust — conglomerations of particles originating outside of the solar system that are smaller than a grain of sand. Prior to IMAP, few of these dust particles had been measured. With two new detections already completed, IDEX has demonstrated its ability to become an unrivaled dust detector. This observation of one of the dust particles shows tentative identifications of the particle’s chemical composition, which includes carbon, oxygen, magnesium, silicon, and hydrogen sulfide.
NASA

By Mara Johnson-Groh
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

Plant Hardiness Zone Map

27 December 2022 at 07:06

What are hardiness zones? It seems every gardening book and nursery catalog refers to plant hardiness zones, also known as climate zones or growing zones. If you’re new to gardening, you may be wondering what all the fuss is with these zones, and how to find out which zone you are gardening in. Basically, plant hardiness zones are a guide […]

The post Plant Hardiness Zone Map appeared first on Backyard Gardener.

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