Late Summer Garden: Easy and Cheap Gardening Tips

January 25, 2012   Categories: Gardening Tips

Has your late summer garden seen superior days? If your outdoor paradise is getting a tiny ragged, and you would like some simple and cheap gardening tips to get it back into shape in time for fall, keep reading!

Most gardens, no matter how well they are designed will have periods without a lot of bloom. But a late summer garden is more than just demand of bloom; it’s overgrown plants, ratty leaves, spindly annuals and brown spots in the lawn. Here’s how to fix these garden problems.

Cut back your blooming perennials by half. This will stimulate new growth, and create need for another flush of flowers in the begin for many varieties. It will also clean up the overgrown look of your flower beds.

If you still have brown foliage from spring bulbs showing, it is innocuous to cut them to the ground now. They have already stored all the energy they need for spring bloom, and the dead plant matter isn’t doing anything for the look of your garden.

If you have a pest problem, you should be addressing it. You can use commercially acquirable Sevin dust for many of the most common predators, or seek out an organic alternative. One good way to refer what is intake your plants is place a piece of white paper under the leaves of the plant being attached and give the plant a good tap or shake. Whatever pest is the culprit should begin onto the paper for simple identification. If you’re stumped, pop it in a blow and take it to your local nursery for finding and advice on how to eradicate it while doing the least alteration to beneficial bugs. Remember, we need those bees! Don’t’ poison them.

If you have annuals planted in containers or beds that have seen superior days, cut them back hard. Apply a good dose of water soluble fertilizer and they will bounce back and begin re-blooming for you. Petunias, alyssum and geraniums all need a good rejuvenation this time of year, but will bloom well into begin if you try this trick.

If your lawn has developed some dry spots, try raking in an organic compost or fine bark to protect the soil and hold in moisture. Water frequently during the day for a week or two until you begin to see new green growth. Cut back on the watering gradually, but be consistent until the lawn is once again green in the spot.

A late summer garden might seem to have gone to sleep, but its pretty simple to throw a huge basket of water on it and wake it back up. (Both literally, and figuratively!) Use these simple and cheap gardening tips to renew your garden, and have a beautiful spot to spend those quiet autumn afternoons.

Want free gardening tips and ideas? Kathy Wilson is a home and garden writer, author and consultant and is the home decorating expert for LifetimeTV.com. Visit her for more home and garden ideas at http://www.TheGardenGlove.com and http://www.TheBudgetDecorator.com . Also visit her at http://www.Women-on-the-Net.com where any woman can learn to make money on the internet!



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