Remember each bird will eat pounds of insects
next spring, summer and fall. Feeding
them now not only enlivens your landscape, it helps protect your plants during
the growing season.
Monday, January 8, 2018
Tuesday, January 2, 2018
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
Oh, Christmas Tree...
Your Christmas tree
can have a second life.
When it’s
time to take down your tree, cut the branches from your tree (making it easier
to remove from the house) and add them (or additional mulch) over the top of
perennial beds and any plantings put in during the fall. This will protect the
plants during freeze and thaw cycles. You don’t need to wait for a January thaw to
put down branches: place them on the snow atop those perennial beds.
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Winter Protection for Roses
If you have roses, and temperatures at your home dip below 5˚F, you need to protect roses. Your goal is to lessen the effects of winter’s freezing and thawing cycle, and to keep the branches from whipping about which, in turn, causes roots to loosen. Reduce stress on roses going into the dormant season by irrigating adequately before the ground freezes.
Hybrid Teas, grandifloras and floribundas should be protected from winter damage after a killing frost but before the soil freezes. Reduce breakage of tall canes by winter winds by cutting them back to 24 to 30 inches and tying tips together. Remove dead and fallen leaves around the plants – cleanliness now helps reduce disease next year. Mound soil over the center of the plants in broad, rounded mounds 8 to 12 high and 12 inches wide. Never use soil from the bed—you are robbing the roots to save the crown. Cover the soil mounds with a mulch of leaves, straw, boughs, or some similar material.
An alternate way of protecting roses is to use a lighter material that will include many air pockets such as wood or bark mulch. In the spring, the mulch can be spread around the rose bed and won’t need to be carried away. Other rosarians prefer to construct wire mesh cylinders to surround each plant, which they fill with mulch, leaves or straw. Or, you may use rose cones (inverted paper maché or plastic baskets), or burlap to wrap individual plants. When the first signs of growth appear in the spring, carefully remove most of the mulch and soil from around the bases of plants.
Sunday, December 10, 2017
Protecting Trees and Shrubs
If you have tightly wrapped your plants in burlap or plastic to protect from breakage from wind, heavy snow or road salt, undo it now! Wrapped plants can suffer heat stress on warm days, and become a cozy home for bark gnawing rodents. Wrap them instead in plastic “chicken wire” style fencing. The plastic is nearly invisible to you but thwarts the dining deer, keeps branches from damage from heavy snow loads, and allows the cold air to flow through your plants making life less comfy for rodents and wintering insects.
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