AUGUST
Remember, all beautiful color you see here in winter and very early spring should be planned about this time. The roots get a fine start and much of the best blooms come from this early planting. If your garden is full of mums now, and you lack room, get pony packs and transplant into 4" plastic size pots, and have inexpensive plants ready to pop into place later. If you plant directly into the garden, do it at about 4 p.m. to give the plants a whole cool night to help them thru the next days heat. Shade them for part of the next day.
THING WINTER COLOR NOW, BUY BY LABOR DAY!
Our early color comes from planting these now. Stock, iceland poppies, calendula, snapdragons, and try some perennials, now, too. Try margurites, blue daisy, foxglove.
Some seeds could be sown in flats now, if that's your thing. Spring flowers and perennials. A few that do well sown in the garden and reseed year after year are: white allysum, forget-me-nots, bachelor buttons, lobelia, nasturtiums, impatients, California poppy, and orange African daisy, but most others need more care and the see is too expensive to waste trying to sow directly into the garden.
Stop fertilizing hibiscus and other subtropicals so they will harden off for winter.
California poppy if watered in a garden situation makes a fine garden flower. It blooms much longer than in the wild. Lack of rainfall keeps it from germinating on our local hillsides. Remember seeds must never dry out while germinating. California poppy comes in mixed colors. African daisies, the little orange and cream colored kind can be sown soon. They bloom for many winter months.
Now, you have thouh about your winter garden, let's see what needs doing this month.
POINSETTIAS may still be pinched back early this month. Just remove the last six inches of each stock to have double the number of blooms.
FUCHSIAS, keep the dead blooms picked and plan to cut some straggly branches back about six inches.
HIBISCUS should be fertilized for the last time this year, but lightly. Later fertilizing will result in growth tener to frost. This is true of many sub-tropicals.
CAMELLIAS must have mulch renewed or replaced to keep the roots cool and don't let them go in hot weather. Fertilize lightly and thing buds. Be careful not to remove the growing tip which can look like a bud.
IRIS should be ordered now.
MUMS should be cut to about 8" abou the first week in August, then do not cut again. Some gardeners do it a few weeks later but do it! Otherwise, they will get six feet tall and collapse.
Prepare areas for sweet peas, dig in manure, and R.S.A. Let set a few weeks, then plan early blooming kind. Remember they are heavy feeders. When six inches high, pinch tips out.
CALENDULA will get thrip so use systemic granules when planting and every six weeks. Thrip is what causes the buds on otherwise healthy plants to dry up. Thrip have eaten them from inside.
Remember, all beautiful color you see here in winter and very early spring should be planned about this time. The roots get a fine start and much of the best blooms come from this early planting. If your garden is full of mums now, and you lack room, get pony packs and transplant into 4" plastic size pots, and have inexpensive plants ready to pop into place later. If you plant directly into the garden, do it at about 4 p.m. to give the plants a whole cool night to help them thru the next days heat. Shade them for part of the next day.
THING WINTER COLOR NOW, BUY BY LABOR DAY!
Our early color comes from planting these now. Stock, iceland poppies, calendula, snapdragons, and try some perennials, now, too. Try margurites, blue daisy, foxglove.
Some seeds could be sown in flats now, if that's your thing. Spring flowers and perennials. A few that do well sown in the garden and reseed year after year are: white allysum, forget-me-nots, bachelor buttons, lobelia, nasturtiums, impatients, California poppy, and orange African daisy, but most others need more care and the see is too expensive to waste trying to sow directly into the garden.
Stop fertilizing hibiscus and other subtropicals so they will harden off for winter.
California poppy if watered in a garden situation makes a fine garden flower. It blooms much longer than in the wild. Lack of rainfall keeps it from germinating on our local hillsides. Remember seeds must never dry out while germinating. California poppy comes in mixed colors. African daisies, the little orange and cream colored kind can be sown soon. They bloom for many winter months.
Now, you have thouh about your winter garden, let's see what needs doing this month.
POINSETTIAS may still be pinched back early this month. Just remove the last six inches of each stock to have double the number of blooms.
FUCHSIAS, keep the dead blooms picked and plan to cut some straggly branches back about six inches.
HIBISCUS should be fertilized for the last time this year, but lightly. Later fertilizing will result in growth tener to frost. This is true of many sub-tropicals.
CAMELLIAS must have mulch renewed or replaced to keep the roots cool and don't let them go in hot weather. Fertilize lightly and thing buds. Be careful not to remove the growing tip which can look like a bud.
IRIS should be ordered now.
MUMS should be cut to about 8" abou the first week in August, then do not cut again. Some gardeners do it a few weeks later but do it! Otherwise, they will get six feet tall and collapse.
Prepare areas for sweet peas, dig in manure, and R.S.A. Let set a few weeks, then plan early blooming kind. Remember they are heavy feeders. When six inches high, pinch tips out.
CALENDULA will get thrip so use systemic granules when planting and every six weeks. Thrip is what causes the buds on otherwise healthy plants to dry up. Thrip have eaten them from inside.
7 comments:
Hi Abby, I live on the central coast of Ca. I planted a few new Hybiscus at the beginning of the spring. Just noticed today they have aphids big time! Guess it's time to spray something, to get rid of them. Thanks for the great post! Hugs, Stephani
Hi Abby, What a great post. I have some of the plants you mention. We are really hot here in Texas and my Camillia has some burn but doing okay where I have it planted. Gardenias are thrifing, and my Hibiscus doing well. My impatiens are not good this year. They have a whitish covering on the leaves. I think it has a fungus.
Wonderful post for the gardener. Thank you for all the great info.
Have a great weekend,
Hugs, Celestina Marie
You have posted wonderful picture of flowers on your blog that is appreciated :)
wow..you have beatiful pictures in your blog..I really love flowers..so much..
Hi abby, Thanks for great info. I like your post. Thank you once again...
This is an informative blog by which I have got that info which I really wanted to get. here
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