Your summer to-do list
Keep track of your summer gardening tasks with this handy checklist! From beautiful blooms to bountiful harvests, we'll make sure your plants stay healthy all season long. On hot summer days, there's no shortage of things to do in the garden. With a little planning, you can make better use of your time by prioritizing what needs to be done. Schedule a regular time to complete those tasks on your summer garden checklist so you don't get overwhelmed.
1. Invest in a rain barrel
Did you know that 1,000 square feet can harvest 623 gallons of water from 1 inch of rain? The roof? Based on rain barrels, a typical ½-in. Rainfall will fill 50 to 55 gallon barrels as shown above. You can use that rainwater to water the plants in your garden. If you plan to use rain barrel water for home grown vegetables, see more information here.
Rain barrels are a great way to reduce the use of municipal treated water. They are also important to our environment because they help reduce water pollution by reducing the amount of stormwater that reaches our streams and rivers.
2. Spot weeds
If you're a new gardener — or if you're dealing with a wild and weedy spot — the first season can be tough. Commit to (and stick to) a weeding schedule, and don't take up more space than you can manage. If there are more weeds than you can handle, mow the weedy areas until you are ready to beat them. Weeding after a soaking rain makes the job easier. Do not leave the roots. If only the leaves are plucked, the weeds will grow back. Keep the weed close to the ground and pull or dig it straight up. A tiller with a forked tip makes weeding a chore.
3. Add mulch
Before mulching beds and borders, it is a good idea to warm and dry the soil slightly (it should be moist, but not sticky). Adding mulch too early in the season can trap cool moisture in the soil, delay plant emergence and prevent the soil from drying out properly.
There are two rules for using mulch to control weeds:
First, apply mulch to the soil that has already been weeded.
Second, lay down a layer thick enough to prevent new weeds from coming up. A 2- to 3-in. Layer is usually sufficient.
4. Separate the beard iris
Bearded Iris (Iris spp and hybrids) should be divided every few years, when the blooms decline or the bunches become crowded. Proper division will help plants bloom profusely and prevent pest and disease problems. See our simple instructions for dividing rhizomes like bearded iris.
5. Feed container plants
It's always a good idea to add a slow-release fertilizer to your planting medium when potting plants (if it doesn't already contain fertilizers). During the growing season, apply liquid forms to plants in pots and containers; Can be overdone with solid forms, which can burn plant roots. Instead of large, infrequent doses, dilute a liquid fertilizer in half and water every so often.
Fertilizer tip
Not everything in pots needs feeding: cacti and succulents, for example, do best in poor or thin soil.
6. Potted plants
Encourage new plant growth in a container plant by transplanting it into a pot one size larger than the one it was growing in. How do you know when to pot a plant into a larger pot? You should check the roots. If you see roots growing out of the bottom drainage holes, it's time. You can take the plant out of the pot and examine the roots. If the roots are so dense that you cannot see any soil, you need to increase the size of the pot.
7. Deadhead plants
Deadheading is the term used to remove flowers from plants when they fade or die. This is done to keep plants attractive and to encourage more blooms in beds and borders, containers or hanging baskets.
Regular deadheading directs energy to stronger growth and more flowers. Once flowers are pollinated, seed heads, pods, or capsules form, using energy for further growth and flower development. A simple method for deadheading is to pinch the faded flowers with the finger and thumb, but with a sharp pair of Pruners can help. If the flower is removed along with its stem, the plant is neat.
0 Comments