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July...
Time To Maintain
July
is a nice time to step back and enjoy the fruits
of your spring/early summer labors. Fuchsia baskets
are producing some brilliant color. Petunias are
soaking up the sun and returning lots of flowers.
Annuals and perennials are growing like crazy.
But be careful not to get stuck in neutral.
Youll
continue enjoying rewards the next couple months
by attending now to a few little upkeep chores
in your yard, garden beds and planters.
- Fill
in those bare spots. By now, most
of the varieties you planted earlier this year
are thriving and blooming. But in those spaces
where a few plants didnt make it, nows
the time to fill in with 1-gallon varieties.
This size of plant brings instant impact to
bare spaces, especially if youre doing
a quick spruce up for summer entertaining.
- Groom
your deck planters. Pinch fading blooms
and trim back runners to give your pots a neater
look and encourage fuller growth. Plus replace
any varieties that have run their course with
some later-blooming varieties.
- Watch
the water needs. During summers
hotter days, dont wait for your plants
to droop before watering. Keep a daily eye on
your yard, beds, and containers. Stick your
finger about an inch down into the soil to check
for moisture. If none is there, its time
to water.
- Fertilize
your container plants frequently.
Just as you must water your container plants
more frequently in hotter weather, you also
need to re-supply them with nutrients regularly.
The frequent watering necessitated by hotter
weather also tends to wash away nutrients in
the overflow that runs out of your containers.
So be sure to fertilize your container plants
at least every two weeks with a liquid or soluble
plant food (and even more often if you're watering
daily due to the heat).

- Timers
save you effort by automating your watering.
It's a snap to attach water timers
to your drip irrigation system and regular hoses.
Then you can practically set them and forget
them -- the timers will turn your water on and
off on just about any schedule you want.
- Mulch,
mulch, mulch! All around shrubs, annuals,
and perennials. A 2-4" layer of organic
mulch will help retain moisture and keep the
weeds down.
- Beware
the lure of those bulb catalogs. If
your mailbox is like mine, its bursting
these days with bulb catalogs. But resist the
urge to blow your bulb budget now. If there
are a few cant-get-them-anywhere-else-varieties
you must have, by all means order them. But
wait until mid-September or so to shop locally
for the classics like tulips, daffodils, iris,
crocus, lilies, and hyacinth. Your better garden
centers will have a great selection of these
varieties in bulk bins. Buying in bulk allows
you to sift through the bulbs, pick the best
ones, and mix-and-match any way you like.
- Tend
your compost pile. Throw spent flowers
and grass clippings onto the pile, keeping noxious
plants like weeds and morning glory for the
trash can. Turn the pile every week or so, and
soak it well if its dry. If decomposition
seems slow, toss a bit of high-nitrogen fertilizer
and dolomite lime into the pile as you turn
it.
- Good
time to re-pot your indoor plants.
It's also a good idea to put some focus on your
indoor plants, especially re-potting those that
are outgrowing their current environment. Doing
it this time of year is a good idea because
you can move your plants outdoors to do the
potting, then leave them out for awhile to get
a good start on growth in the new pot.
So enjoy
the weather and all the blooming beauty, but keep
an eye on the upkeep so everything keeps going!
While
much of the information in these tips is applicable
in several gardening zones/climates, some of the
plants and timing suggested are best suited to
the Northwest, generally in the mild/wet growing
regions found along the I-5 corridor. You should
make appropriate adjustments or consult local
gardening experts in regions whose climates differ
from this area of the Northwest. |