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Gardening Dairy Tasks in Your Garden


The temperature has dropped perceptibly and thoughts of the cooler months fill the mind. As we move towards autumn there is plenty to do in the flower and vegetable garden.
Plenty to do in the garden

Begin the autumn clean-up as plants begin to look tatty and die down. It's much easier to do what you can now than face a huge job later. The extent of the clean up depends on your climate.

In wet and muggy climates as much vegetative material as possible should be removed to lessen to opportunities for disease to take hold. In cooler, drier climates, leaving dead stems creates an attractive winter silhouette and provides a degree of natural protection from severe frosts - you can cut these away in late spring, when new growth is about to emerge and the danger of frost damage has passed. If you live in a climate between these then it depends on the plants, your gardening style and personal taste!

If the garden is wet, try to stay off the soil as this causes compacting, damaging soil structure and reducing the ability to drain, making your garden even soggier! A long plank spreads your weight, raised beds and containers are invaluable in the wet.

Autumn mulching can follow any cleanup - - but make sure the soil is moist before mulching. Start to collect the mulching materials that you will need, as nothing slows the gardening task more than having to down tools and set out in search of compost or mulch
General Garden Tasks

  • Frost and cold, snowy weather has arrived in many areas, and with it a last chance to prepare plants to cope with the cold.
  • Gently remove snow from shrubs and other plants to prevent broken branches and bushes becoming open at the centre.
  • In winter you must look after your tools; good gardening equipment is costly and with wetter and colder weather everything gets muddy. Clean and oil tools before you put them away, wipe down wooden handles as well as metal parts. You can beat the spring rush and take the lawnmower in for servicing; as growth slows it won't be needed quite as often over the winter.
  • Do avoid walking on the soil when it is wet- compacting the soil will damage drainage and make your garden even soggier!
  • It's catalogue time - order seeds for the new season's flower and vegetable garden
Vegetable Garden

    Vegetables
  • Pick winter crops while still at their best - ready now Brussels sprouts, silver beet, cauliflowers, cabbage, parsnips, winter carrots, and leeks
  • Asparagus is a vegetable that repays planting over many years. To prepare beds cultivate deeply and add generous amounts of compost. Existing asparagus beds should be cultivated carefully to avoid damaging the crowns that lie just below the surface, add a new layer of mulch.
  • Sow seeds of broad beans, cabbage, broccoli, carrots, lettuce, peas, spinach and turnips in the warm north and sheltered regions. Broad beans can be sown; garlic and shallots can be planted in other regions. In cooler districts - nothing!
  • Undercover Seedlings - cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli and lettuce seedlings grown under cover.

    Fruit
  • Prune kiwifruit and grape vines. Grapes - cut away last year's fruited canes and tie down new canes. Sideshoots will grow from these and fruit next year. Kiwifruit are pruned to just above the top wire on a frame, and the vines trained horizontally, one to each wire or support. Three year old fruiting vines are cut back to a dormant bud near the main cane to renew fruiting laterals.
  • Black currants should be pruned now. Remove about 25% of the oldest shoots at the base, improving air circulation, reducing congestion in the heart of the bush and encouraging new growth.
  • Remove secondary growth since summer pruning of trained fruit trees
  • Heel in new fruit trees until you can plant them
  • Plant trees and bushes as weather allows.
  • Pot grown strawberries over wintered in the glasshouse will crop several weeks before out-door plants.

    Glasshouses
  • Check overwintering plants for frost damage, temperatures may fall well below zero in unheated glasshouses. Protect vulnerable plants
Lawn Care

  • In warmer areas continue to mow as needed, but set the blades a little higher
  • Remove fallen leaves from the lawn. Run over these with the mower or shred and pile these in a corner of the garden to make deep, rich leaf mould compost after 12-18 months.
  • Scatter any worm casts that have formed.
  • Lay turf on prepared lawn surfaces.
  • Begin work to prepare lawns for spring sowing.
Trees and Shrubs
  • Trees delivered from mail order nurseries must be planted as soon as they arrive as roots are trimmed and soil removed to reduce shipping costs.
  • If you can't plant straight away, heel the plants into the garden.
  • Check your plant ties - winter winds can break or loosen ties and plants begin to rock in the soil, suffering root damage. Ties that are too tight will chafe and rub causing breaking the bark and allowing entry to disease, or causing branches and stems to break.
  • Lightly prune autumn flowering sasanqua camellias when they have finished flowering.
  • Hydrangeas can be pruned back to a pair of fat buds, cut with care or you will remove flowering wood. Never reduce branches by more than a third, and remove a few old woody stems at t the base every year to rejuvenate your bushes.
  • Protect marginally hardy plants with hessian, bracken or frost cloth in very cold weather.Remove snow by gently shaking the branches before it causes trees to open up or branches to break.

    Hedges
  • Measure and prepare ground for planting new hedges - remember that hedges always grow wider than you could possibly imagine!
  • Hedge planting can be undertaken from April on
  • Trim hedges Make sure your tools are cleaned and disinfected to reduce disease spread. Collect and compost the clippings - leaving them is unsightly and easily spreads disease.



Page Index
General Garden Tasks
Annuals
Borders
Bulbs, Corms etc.
Climbing Plants
Flower Garden
Glasshouse
Garden Tip
Hanging Baskets, Containers
Lawns
Perennials
Roses
Trees and Shrubs
More Garden How-To



Garden Tasks by Season

Flower Garden Tasks
  • Time to take semi-ripe cuttings, especially of plants that are not reliably hardy in colder areas. Pelargonium cuttings can be taken now and over-wintered away from frosts.
  • Time to begin to tidy ready for winter
  • Time to prepare new borders and rejuvenate old schemes

    Hanging Baskets, Containers and Window Boxes
  • Empty containers and baskets of annuals that have finished flowering - tip the contents into the compost bin and clean the containers.
  • Plant up displays of winter flowering annuals such as pansies and polyanthus.
  • Deadhead spent flowers to prolong the blooming period
  • Move fuchsias and chrysanthemums under cover as the weather cools

    Borders
  • Late season perennialsBegin to prepare new borders and to clear any areas you want to renovate, as plants begin to flag. Dividing perennials and potting them up or, if you have space, replanting in a stock bed is a good solution.
  • Cut down plants with tatty, fading foliage and compost. Decaying plant material, dead flowerheads and fallen leaves encourages pests and disease, especially in humid weather
  • In cooler, drier climates, leaving dead stems creates an attractive winter silhouette and provides a degree of natural protection from severe frosts - you can cut these away in late spring, when new growth is about to emerge and the danger of frost damage has passed.
  • If you live in a climate between wet-humid and dry-cold then it depends on the plants, the state of collapse, your gardening style and personal taste. As a general rule, if it going to rot then remove it.
  • Keeping weeds down and encouraging good old-fashioned 'movement of air' is one of the best defences helps to combat fungi and disease
  • Weed when you can- perennial and annual weeds are far better removed before they can seed. If you can't pull them, at least shear off the seed heads and remove them, or next year the problem will only worsen

    Annuals
  • Begin to plant winter annuals - pansies, wallflowers, polyanthus, Iceland poppies and hardy bedding begonias
  • Remove bedding plants that have finished flowering, and begin to look tatty, before disease gets a hold in dying plants.

    Perennials
  • Clean and tidy as above
  • Deadhead perennials to prevent seeding of any prolific colonisers - Alchemilla mollis (Lady's mantle) and others are keen to seed.
  • Lift and divide perennials that have become overcrowded, or have died out at the centre
  • Collect seed of perennials you wish to multiply
  • Take cuttings of favourite plants to bulk up your plantings, rejuvenate plants and ensure against winter losses.
  • Plant out spring-raised perennials

    Bulbs, Corms and Tubers
  • Lift gladioli that have finished flowering.
  • Lift dahlias before the first frost and compost foliage
  • Plant spring flowering bulbs- they will establish new root growth and give a better display. Add a handful of well-rotted compost to the planting hole, or a good fertiliser. Add a little grit to improve drainage and deter bulb-eating pests, and scattering coffee grounds around the hole adds nitrogen and deters narcissi fly. Don't plant in waterlogged soil, wait or they will rot.
  • Lift and scale bulbs.

    Climbing Plants
  • Tie in new growth regularly on climbing plants to reduce wind damage.
  • Plant new climbers so that they can make good root growth and establish before the season finishes
  • Prune wisteria to cut out excessive, leafy growth (main pruning in late winter)
  • Don't prune clematis - tempting but better left until winter for those varieties that require any pruning

    Roses
  • RosesWet humid weather encourages fungi and disease. Keep a close eye on your roses, or plan to switch to more disease resistant varieties
  • Deadhead roses regularly to keep the garden clean and disease free. Flowers that have never opened but 'balled' in wet weather should be removed.
  • Stop watering and fertilising so that growth slows before the frosts hit
  • Let hips form on heritage and species roses, encouraging a slow down and hardening in growth as colder weather approaches
  • Clear the beds of old mulch (removing fallen leaves with it) and replace, helping to prevent the carry-over of disease from season to season
  • Tie in new shoots on climbers and ramblers and prune in April
  • Begin to buy and plant new roses in cold districts, other districts - get your order in!
Tasks for Trees and Shrubs
  • Take cuttings of marginally hardy shrubs as well as aromatic shrubs such as lavenders, santolina and salvias.
  • Keep trees and shrubs clear of weeds and replenish mulch.
  • Last chance to trench around plants that you plan to move in June/July when they are dormant, they will make new root growth and move more successfully.
  • Check ties are secure and not chaffing, especially if planted in an exposed position, remove ties from established plantings

Garden Tip
Planting Bulbs

Colourful ToolsAlways prepare your bulb bed to two times the recommended planting depth. Bulbs need room to grow and if the roots don't have space to develop then the blooms will be poor.
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