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July
Gardening
July
is a time when you can sit back for a moment and enjoy the fruits of
your labor in the garden. While there are still other ongoing tasks to
perform in the garden, your primary concern will be assuring an ample
supply of water for your plants.
Here are a few July gardening tasks and projects that you can do to
help keep your garden looking it's best for the rest of this season.
Watering
the garden
The
amount of water that your garden will need is going to depend on the
weather conditions in your area. The primary rule of summer watering
is to water thoroughly and deeply each time and to allow the soil dry
out between waterings. Deep watering will allow the plant's roots to
grow deeper, where they are less likely to dry out, as well as the
added benefit of anchoring the plant into the ground better. Light,
surface watering actually wastes water, because the water never
actually reaches the root zone of the plant, and the moisture rapidly
evaporates from the top inch of soil.
The
best way to tell if your plants are receiving enough water is to take
a trowel or shovel and dig down a few inches. The soil should be moist
at least 3 or 4 inches deep to insure that the water is reaching the
root zone of the plants. Of course, if you planted drought resistant
plants in your garden, you won't have to water as often, but the
principal of deep watering still applies. As the weather dries out,
your container plants may need daily watering, especially if the pots
are exposed to the drying sunlight. Push your finger into the soil in
your container plantings at least once a day (more often on hot,
dry days) to feel for moisture and be certain that plants are
getting enough water. Apply water until it runs out the drainage
holes.
Try
to do your watering during the morning hours so that the leaves can
dry off a bit before the hot sun hits them. Evening watering is
sometimes acceptable if the temperatures are warm enough to insure
that foliage dries before the temperature drops at night. (Wet
foliage makes plants more susceptible to fungus and disease.)
Perennials,
annuals, and bulbs
Continue
to dead head (remove dead flowers) your annuals to encourage
continued blooming. If your annuals have died off, pull them out and
add them to the compost pile. Replant that spot with hardy annuals
or perennials, such as Pansies, Calendulas, or Armeria. Get a second
bloom from faded annuals by cutting them back by one half their
height, then fertilize them with a liquid 5-10-10 fertilizer.
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Roses
will need to be fertilized each month through the summer. In colder
areas, allow shrub roses to ripen by discontinuing feeding them at
the end of the month.
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Fertilize
container gardens regularly with a liquid all purpose plant food.
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Chrysanthemums
should be lightly fertilized every two weeks. Discontinue pinching
your mums in mid month so they will be able to develop flower buds
for the fall. To promote 'trophy size' flowers, allow only one or
two main shoots to develop. Remove all side buds as they begin to
develop.
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To
produce the largest Dahlia flowers (especially 'Dinner plate'
Dahlias), the main stems should be kept free of side shoots,
allowing only the main terminal bud to develop. Be sure to provide
adequate support to prevent wind damage.
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Bearded
Iris may be divided and replanted when they have finished blooming.
Discard all shriveled and diseased parts
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Sweet
peas may tend to fizzle out with the hot summer weather, but with
heavy mulching to keep the roots cool and moist you can prolong the
flowering season by a few more weeks. A little mid-day shade will
also help to maintain the quality of the flowers and prolong the
blooming season.
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Verbenas,
Euonymus, Pachysandra, Ivy, and climbing roses are some of plants
that will root fairly quickly by layering them into the warm soil.
Fasten a section of the stem containing one or more "eyes"
down onto cultivated soil with a horseshoe shaped piece of wire and
cover it with additional soil. By summers end, the stem should be
rooted sufficiently to sever it from the parent plant and replant
into another area of the garden..
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Sow
seeds of Hollyhocks, English daisies, Foxgloves, Violas, Canterbury
bells, and Sweet William into the garden now for next year's bloom.
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Geranium
cuttings may be made in late July to start plants for indoor bloom
during the winter months, and for setting into the garden next
spring. You may need to provide supplemental lighting with
fluorescent grow lights for really good winter blooms indoors.
Shrubs
and trees
Summer
blooming shrubs should be pruned for shape after they have finished
flowering. Remove any dead or diseased branches.
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Fertilize
flowering shrubs like Rhododendrons, Camellias and Azaleas
immediately after they have finished flowering with a 'Rhododendron'
or 'Evergreen' type fertilizer.
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Dead
head the developing seed pods from your Rhododendrons and Azaleas to
improve next years bloom. Be careful not to damage next years buds
which may be hidden just below the pod.
Fruits
and veggies
Begin
enjoying the harvest of your homegrown fruits, vegetables and herbs!
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Fertilize
June bearing strawberries after the harvest, and ever-bearing
varieties half way through the season.
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Plant
out successions of salad crops for continued harvesting throughout
the summer. Sow seeds for cool-season crops directly into the garden
by mid-July.
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Continue
to protect your fruit from the birds with netting.
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Empty
areas of the garden, where the crops have finished, should be
replanted with either a fall vegetable crop, or a cover crop of
clover or vetch to help control weeds. Cover crops can be tilled
into the soil later, to add humus and nitrates to the soil.
Lawn
Contrary
to popular belief, a brown lawn isn't necessarily a dead lawn.
Grasses go dormant in times of drought, but will quickly return to
life with the fall rains. If a lush green lawn is important to you,
and you don't mind mowing, water it regularly, and deeply. If a
water shortage is expected, or you hate tending to grass, you may
choose to just let your lawn go dormant, and water it as seldom as
once a month.
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Raise
the cutting height of the mower. Taller grass cools the roots and
helps to keep the moisture in the soil longer.
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Avoid
using fertilizers in hot, dry weather.
House
Plants
House
plants can be moved outside to a shady, protected spot.
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Continue
to watch for insect or disease damage and take the necessary steps
to control the problem.
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Warmer
and drier weather means it will be necessary to water and mist your
house plants more often.
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Feed
your house plants with 1/2 the recommended strength of a good
soluble house plant fertilizer while they are actively growing.
Odds
and ends
Be
alert to slug and snail damage. These creatures will be hiding
during the heat of the day, but will come out of hiding in the cool
morning and evening hours or after a rain. Seek and destroy ALL
slugs and their eggs!
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Keep
the weeds pulled, before they have a chance to flower and go to seed
again. Otherwise, you will be fighting newly germinated weed seed
for the next several years.
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Change
the water in your bird bath regularly, and keep it filled. Standing
water may become a breeding ground for mosquito larvae.
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Continue
to watch for insect or disease damage throughout the garden, and
take the necessary steps to control the problem.
Have
a great month!!

God Bless America
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