If the asparagus ferns are yellowing after a frost, then you can cut them during your fall cleanup. Here in Georgia, mine stay green unless we have a really bad winter. I don't remove them until I start getting the garden ready for spring planting which is sometime in mid-winter.
to keep the soil moist
The Ferns evolved before the Flowering Plants.
what are the six important questions to answer before planting in the garden
Broad platforms cut into steep slopes used for planting crops are terraces.
Deforestation: cutting down forests. Reforestation: planting forests to replace previous ones. Afforestation: planting forests where there was none before.
Ferns are wild, I couldn't see why anyone would actually buy these. If you cut them back they still grow, you cant hurt these plants, so cut back whenever you want..oh use a pair od scissors, or a knife to cut these back..I just pull em out.
because if you didn't plow the land before planting, the seeds will die because of lack of nutrients.And if you didn't harrow the land before planting, there would be many weeds that will get more nutrients of the soil.
A fern is not a flowering plant.All kinds of ferns existed long before flowering plants developed.
they weren't properly cut when planted roots will naturally curve around the inside of a pot or root ball, so before planting they need to be cut so they will branch out underground and not choke themselves in a ball
as much as you want
Ferns and herbs do not grow in the same situations. Ferns grow in full to lightly shaded areas with moist rich organic soil while most herbs are Mediterranean based and prefer sunny areas with quick draining sandy soil. Planting these herbs in the same areas as ferns will have them rotting and dying within a year or two. Not saying it's impossible. It would just be periods of trial and error to make it happen.