Gardening Tips and Tricks for Late Autumn--Part Two
Watering Your Lawn and Garden
You can't forget about watering in the middle of fall. The
summer's long over, but proper moisture now is key to your
plants' survival over the cold winter months. You're likely to
hear two pieces of advice on watering. One is that you should
give established plants an inch of water per week, whether from
rain or irrigation. The other is that personal observation of
your own garden is the only way to judge how much water it
needs. One fact about which there is more agreement: the ideal
is to maintain constant moisture, not a cycle of wet soil
followed by dry soil.
Although overwatering can be as big a problem as underwatering,
most gardeners err on the side of too little. Your needs will
vary through the year depending on the rate of
evapotranspiration in your garden. Evapotranspiration refers to
the two ways that plants lose water. There's evaporation, the
loss of water to the air from soil, water and other surfaces.
Then the other way is called transpiration, or water lost
primarily from the leaves and stems of the plants. You can often
obtain evapotranspiration rates for local areas from water
departments and other agencies. You will see a graphic
description of how a plant's natural need for water changes
during the growing season.
In the meantime, keep these pointers in mind:
1) Water when it's needed, not according to the calendar. Check
the top six inches of the soil. If it's dry and falls apart
easily, water. Your plants will also show signs that they need
water. Wilting, curling or brown leaves mean that your plants
may lack adequate water. Meanwhile, bear in mind that excess
water creates a lack of oxygen in plants, making them show
similar symptoms to underwatering.
2) Water slowly, not more than one-half inch of water per hour.
Too much water can be lost to runoff. This is why handheld
watering cans or handheld hoses generally work only for watering
small areas.
3) Water deeply. With established vegetables and flowers, six
inches is a minimum. With trees and shrubs, water one to two
feet or more. Shallow watering does more harm than good; it
discourages plants from developing the deep roots they need to
find their own water. Except when you are watering seedlings,
soil should never be wet only in the top layer.
4) Water in the morning, never during the hottest part of the
day. Too much water may be lost to evaporation. Watering in the
evening sometimes causes problems in humid climates,
particularly with overhead watering, which wets all the foliage.
Plants that remain wet at night sometimes come down with disease
and fungal growth.
5) Don't allow runoff. On heavy clay soil, one inch of water
will probably cause runoff. At the first sign that water is not
penetrating the soil, turn it off. Irrigate in an hour or so,
after the initial water has penetrated.
Building a Bin and Making Your Own Compost
A bin will contain your compost pile and make it more attractive
as well as keep it from spilling or blowing over into your yard.
A circular or square structure can be made from fencing wire.
The idea is to push the compost material together to make it
heat up and rot properly. The bin should be at least three feet
wide and three feet deep to provide enough space for the
spreading material. Use untreated wood or metal fence posts for
the corners and wrap sturdy wire fencing around them. The fence
mesh should be small enough that rotting materials won't fall
out. When the compost is ready, unwind the wire and scoop from
the bottom of the pile. Then re-pile the undecomposed material
and wrap the wire back around the heap.
It's easy to cook up your own pile. At first, layer grass
clippings with a dash of leaves and twigs to create a concoction
that turns into humus, the best plant food. Added ingredients
for the compost comes from everyday waste in the kitchen and
yard. But avoid any items that ruin your compost. Use green
materials such as fruit and vegetable scraps, eggshells, coffee
grounds, and grass and plant clippings; and brown materials,
such as leaves, wood and bark chips, shredded newspaper, straw
and sawdust from untreated wood. Avoid using any meat, oil, fat,
grease, diseased plants, sawdust or chips from pressure-treated
wood, dog or cat feces, weeds that go to seed or dairy products.
These can befoul, spoil and make smelly and rancid a perfectly
good productive compost heap.
There are two types of composting: cold and hot. Cold composting
is as simple as piling up your yard waste or taking out the
organic materials in your trash such as fruit and vegetable
peels, coffee grounds or egg shells and then piling them in your
yard. Over the course of a year or so, the material will
decompose. Hot composting is for the more serious gardener;
you'll get compost in one to three months during warm weather.
Four ingredients are required for fast-cooking hot compost:
nitrogen, carbon, air and water. These items feed
microorganisms, which speed up the process of decay.
To create your own organic hot-compost heap, wait until you have
enough material to make a pile that's three feet deep. To ensure
an even composition, first create alternating four-inch layers
of green and brown materials. Green materials such as vegetable
scraps, grass clippings and plant trimmings create nitrogen.
Brown materials such as leaves, shredded newspaper and twigs
create carbon. Sprinkle water over the pile regularly so it has
the consistency of a damp sponge. Don't add too much, or the
microorganisms will become waterlogged and won't heat the pile.
During the growing season, you should provide the pile with
oxygen by turning it once a week with a pitchfork. The best time
is when the center of the pile feels very warm. Stirring up the
pile helps it cook faster and prevents material from becoming
matted down and developing a bad odor. At this point, the layers
have served their purpose of creating equal amounts of green and
brown materials throughout the pile. Stir it thoroughly, turning
it over repeatedly. When the compost no longer gives off heat
and becomes dry, brown and crumbly, it's fully cooked and ready
to feed to your garden.
Concentrated Pest Control
Slugs and other pests don't disappear as the weather gets
cooler. You'll find them at all life stages in October, from
eggs to youngsters and adults. For slugs, use whatever measures
you prefer, salt, slug bait or saucers of beer to eliminate
them. It's best to catch them at the early stages to stop the
reproduction cycle. And keep the ground well-raked and tidied to
reduce their natural habitat.
Here's a brief list of common garden pests and how to control
them:
Thrips: Adult thrips are about one-sixteenth-inch long and have
dark bodies with four fringed wings. Their size makes them
difficult to detect in the garden. They attack young leaves,
flower stalks and buds. Spray young foliage, developing buds and
the soil around the bush with an insecticide containing acephate.
Cane borer: This insect is the maggot of the eggs laid by
sawflies or carpenter bees in the freshly-cut cane of the rose
after pruning. One telltale sign is a neatly-punctured hole
visible on the top of the cane. To remove the pest, cut several
inches down the cane until there are no more signs of the maggot
or pith-eaten core. Seal all pruning cuts with pruning sealer.
Japanese beetle, Fuller rose beetle: These will eat parts of the
foliage and sometimes the flowers. Pick beetles off the bush by
hand. Or spray foliage and flowers with an insecticide
containing acepate or malathion.
Leaf miner: This insect can be spotted on foliage by the
appearance of irregular white chain-like blisters containing its
grub. Remove foliage and discard it to prevent further
infestation.
Spittle bug: This small, greenish-yellow insect hides inside a
circular mass of white foam on the surface of new stems, usually
during the development of the first bloom cycle in early spring.
Spray a jet of water to remove the foam and the insect.
Roseslug: When you see new foliage with a skeletonized pattern,
indicating that it has been eaten, chances are it's the
roseslug. Remove the infected foliage and spray with
insecticidal soap or an insecticide that contains acephate.
Weed Whacking Made Easy
Actually, this is a slight exaggeration. There's no rest for the
wicked. Keep staying ahead of your nasty weeds all this and next
month. They serve as Home Sweet Home for all manner of pests and
bugs, and destroying them before they flower and seed will save
you much work in the future.
Preparation is the key. All gardeners know what it's like to
have their yards invaded by unwelcome plants. Although there's
no really easy way to banish weeds, there are a few solid
techniques you can use to reclaim your turf. At the very least,
you can limit this utmost in hostile takeovers.
Here is a simple outline of effective battle strategies you can
use in the fall:
1) Be a mulching maniac. Mulch acts as a suffocating blanket by
preventing light from reaching weed seeds. At the same time, it
holds moisture for your plants and provides nutrients for your
soil as it decomposes. Apply coarse mulch, such as bark or wood
chips, directly onto soil. Leaves, grass clippings, or straw
work better as a weed deterrent with a separating layer of
newspaper, cardboard or fabric between them and the soil.
2) Water those weeds. Pulling weeds is easier and more efficient
when the soil is moist. You are more likely to get the whole
root system, and your yanking won't disturb surrounding plants
as much either. No rain? Turn on the sprinkler or even water
individual weeds, leave for a few hours and then get your hands
dirty. Just ignore the strange looks from your neighbors as you
lovingly water your weeds.
3) Cut weeds down in their prime. Weeds love open soil. But if
you till or cultivate and then wait to plant, you can
outmaneuver the weeds. Till the ground at least twice before you
plant. Your first digging will bring dormant weed seeds to the
surface where they can germinate. Watch and wait for a few weeks
until they begin to grow. Then slice up the weeds again with a
tiller or a hoe, only don't dig as deep. Now it should be safe
to put precious plants into the soil.
Food for Thought
In addition to performing these autumnal lawn and garden duties,
you may want to harvest your fall vegetables such as the
perennial squashes. Do a taste test and harvest them when flavor
is at its peak. If you'd like to extend the harvest of carrots,
turnips and other root vegetables, leave some in the ground to
mulch as the weather gets colder. Early next month, before
temperatures drop too much, seed cover crops such as clover,
peas or vetch to enrich the soil. It will serve as a natural
fertilizer, stifle weed growth and help loosen up the soil for
next year's crops.
As for your houseplants that you've put outside for the summer,
if September was mild enough that your geraniums and other such
plants are still outdoors, be sure to make them cozy inside
before the first frost takes a bite out of them. Take geranium
cuttings of two to four inches to root indoors. If you treat
houseplants chemically, be sure to keep them warm and away from
direct sunlight. Fertilize houseplants now and they won't need
it again until March. And remember to get your poinsettias and
your Thanksgiving and Christmas cacti ready for well-timed
holiday color. Give them a daily dose of ten hours of bright
daylight or four hours of direct sun and fourteen hours of night
darkness. Cacti need a cool environment of fifty to sixty
degrees, while poinsettias prefer a warmer sixty-five to seventy
degrees. Be sure and let your cacti dry out between waterings.
For a true gardenaholic, winter is often considered to be the
enemy. But with a few steps toward preparation in the early- to
mid-fall, you can take care of your lawn, garden and houseplants
in a way that will keep them thriving and surviving until the
dawning of yet another most welcome and bountiful springtime.
The information in these two articles was gleaned from the MSN
House and Home website and the Better Homes and Gardens website.