The more you know, the better you can grow.

Our story

Bethany Naccarato is an author, trained master gardener, educator, and owner of Blueacre Garden. A Connecticut native, Bethany found her passion for gardening at a young age growing vegetables with her grandparents and filling the beds at her childhood home with a variety of annual and perennial flowers. Bethany continued to pursue her passion in the classroom, becoming a Master Gardener. 

In 2023, Bethany launched her social media presence, @BlueacreGarden, on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, where her followers learn best practices, solutions to common issues, and other advice to help them achieve the gardens of their dreams. Today, Bethany has over 130,000 followers across her social media channels and has been featured in The New York Times. She loves gardening at her home, "Blueacre," where she grows a variety of organic heirloom vegetables, and annual and perennial flowers including peonies, zinnias, and dahlias.

A woman in a khaki dress sitting with a large basket containing red, orange, yellow, and green tomatoes, purple and white dahlia and zinnia flowers.  Behind the woman is a large field of multicolored zinnia and cosmos flowers.
Several large, pink multi-petaled peony flowers

Grown with care

I’m passionate about sustainable gardening practices. I don’t use any harmful pesticides or fertilizers in my garden. It is possible to have stunning landscapes and productive vegetable and flower gardens without resorting to chemicals that are toxic to pollinators and wildlife — let me show you how!

A brown dog sits in front of a row of multicolored dahlia flowers

Meet Sunshine! Our four-legged helper.

“From start to finish, working with Bethany was pleasant and stress free. Her proposed design was beyond what we could have imagined. Everything came together beautifully.”

- Marguerite P, landscape design customer

“Blueacre”

The name “Blueacre” is a nod to Bethany’s career as a tax attorney. In property and contract law, terms like “Blackacre,” “Whiteacre,” and “Greenacre” are used as names for fictitious estates in law school classes, exams, and the bar exam.