- Check out clearance sales on
garden supplies and plants. Don't buy sickly or leggy plants,
but if a plant looks healthy, it usually is. Make sure to sign
up for our newsletter.
- Pull out lettuce that has
"bolted," that is, it's sent up a long central
stalk. It's gotten too bitter for good eating.
- You can remove yellowed, brown
bulb foliage as soon as it pulls off without resistance -- no
sooner!
- Dig up and discard tulip and
hyacinth bulbs that performed poorly this year; for example,
they sent up spindly leaves and stalks and few if any flowers.
Most tulips and hyacinths only last 2-3 years and peter out
after that.
- While your bulb plantings are
still fresh in your mind, make a map or make other notations
of where to plant what type of bulbs in the fall. This way,
you'll know exactly what to buy and where to plant it and
never accidentally dig up other bulbs again.
Planting Trees and Shrubs --
Continue to plant container-grown trees, shrubs, perennial herbs,
and perennial flowers. Finish up planting warm-season annual
flowers, vegetables, and herbs, such as marigolds, coleus,
fuchsias, tomatoes, and basil.
Try planting your tomatoes under
the eaves of your house. Research indicates that this may help
keep the leaves drier and prevent tomato late blight.
Dividing Perennials --
You can still divide most perennials as long as they're not spring
or early summer bloomers and as long as the foliage isn't more
than 5 or 6 inches high. Divide them if they are getting crowded
(reduced blooms, a dead spot in the middle) or you simply want
more plants.
Deadheading 101 --
Keep deadheading! For the most flowers and tidiest garden,
deadhead daily. Some gardeners take a few minutes each morning,
making it part of their daily routine. And since roses are going
full-tilt, it's especially important to deadhead roses to keep the
blooms going longer.
You can still prune evergreens
any time from now until late summer. (Don't prune later than that
or you'll prompt new, tender growth that will get zapped by
winter's cold.)
Smart Pruning
-- Prune spring-blooming shrubs and trees, such as lilacs,
forsythia, and crabapples, as soon as possible after bloom.
Snap off the old flower heads of
rhododendrons, but be careful not to injure new branches emerging
right beneath the faded blooms. Also shear azaleas by removing the
outermost inch of new growth to encourage foliage developing lower
on the stem and an overall bushier plant.
Mulch Matters
-- If you haven't already, apply a layer of mulch on flower beds
and around trees and shrubs once the soil has warmed sufficiently.
As a rule of thumb, this happens about the same time the tulips
have faded. Mulch reduces weeds, conserves moisture, and prevents
disease. Great stuff!
- Keep new plantings
well-watered.
- For mums, pinch off the last
inch or so of the branches until July to assure bushy,
well-flowering plants. While you're at it, cut back asters and
other tall, floppy, late-summer bloomers by about one-third
once they're a foot or so high. They'll be sturdier and flower
better.
Feeding Roses
-- Continue to fertilize roses. In cold regions, Zones 5 and
colder, keep fertilizing to a minimum. Studies have shown that
keeping your roses a little "hungry" helps them
overwinter better. A lean diet prevents too much lush green
growth, which can get badly zapped in the winter.
Annual Stakes and Supports
-- Stake tall plants that will need it now while they're just a
foot or so high.
- Stop cutting asparagus and
rhubarb at the end of the month so they can rejuvenate for
next year.
- Now is the time to control a
number of diseases. Check junipers, birches, cherry and
arborvitae for bagworms and other leaf-eating caterpillars,
then treat with Bacillus thuringiensis as needed. Watch
for fungal disease on tomatoes and roses and spray with a
fungicide (a botanical, earth-friendly one if possible). Keep
an eye out also for aphids and other small sucking insects.
Treat with insecticidal soap.
- Continue slug and snail
control.
- Inspect your irrigation
system, if you have one, for damaged sprinkler heads, which
waste water. Replace as needed.
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