Home Garden Tips - Winter Preparation

Your Garden - Winter
Preparation
Some people
believe that when the weather starts getting colder and the leaves
start to fall, it is time to put away the gardening tools and wait
until next spring to work on their garden again. Wrong. Winter is
an important time to maintain your garden's health and assure
yourself a good crop for next year. You may think that might take
to long to prepare your garden, but the truth is that it takes less
than one day to prepare your garden for the upcoming
winter.
When the nighttime temperatures drop to less than
forty-five degrees Fahrenheit for more than four
days in a row, or frost is forecasted for your
area, you know its time to begin preparing your garden. You should
begin by evaluating your garden design, check which plants grew
well in the past season, and which plants did not do well. Fall is
a good time to decide which plants will remain in you garden next
year, and which ones should go.
It is also a good time to decide which new plants you want to grow.
To make your garden more colorful and healthy, be sure only to
plant the more hardy plants during the fall so
that they can withstand the winter. Some plants that will do fine
being planted in fall are: rudbeckia, Aster Novi-belgii,
Anemone Japonica, panicle hyandea, endive, escarole, and
Brussels sprouts.
After you have finished this you should begin cleaning up your
garden. Begin by pulling out weeds that may have
cropped up, and raking fallen leaves. Weeds and
rotten leaves can carry insects and diseases that might be harmful
to your garden. You should also rid your garden of spent annual
plants, and harvest your vegetables and other
plants that cannot withstand the winter weather. After fall has
come and gone, the leaves will be off your trees and you can see
the rotten branches. Trimming off the unwanted
branches from your trees isn't necessary to your gardens
health, but may help later on by not dropping branches on your
plants and not blocking too much of the sun.
If you have younger trees you should consider wrapping them
and supporting them with stakes to help them survive the
winter wind and cold. Putting mulch over your garden for the winter
can be a helpful way to protect plants from sudden
temperature changes and heavy snow. For mulch you can use
about five inches of shredded bark, pine needles, or a variety of
other materials. You have to be careful not to mulch too early,
because some insects may still be alive and able to take shelter in
it for the winter.
Once you are finished with your gardening
tools you should clean them and make
sure they are in a safe place where they won't rust and you know
where they'll be for next year. Before winter comes you should
always set out slug repellent, as
slugs are one of the worst bugs to have in your garden. If you have
a pool or fountain in your garden, be sure to take out any fish
that you have in them and bring them inside. There's nothing sadder
than a fish frozen in a block of ice.

|