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In the Garden

On gardening with Bill Cary

What to Do This Week in the Garden

July
25

Perennials: Start collecting flowers for drying. Pick them in late morning after the dew has thoroughly dried. Remove leaves from the stems and hang in small bunches. Use elastic bands to attach the bunches to coat hangers which can be hung near the furnace or in a dry attic. Achillea, lavender and goldenrod can be dried this way.

Flowers: Continue to fertilize every other week and keep pinching off faded flowers from petunias, geraniums, snapdragons and other annuals to keep them blooming.

Vegetables and fruits: Pick every day .The more you pick the more you get. Give away the surplus or preserve in jellies, jams and pickles. Continue monitoring for insects. Japanese beetles can be controlled by handpicking.

Check tomato plants to be sure stems are tied securely to stakes: use cotton string or cloth. One tie in a figure eight form will train the leader to grow upright. Another tie 6 to 10 inches above a fruit cluster will keep the fruits from pulling down the plant with their weight. Cages are useful, too, but need additional support with stakes.

Trees and shrubs: Monitor for insect infestation and treat if the damage is severe. Summer-blooming trees and shrubs include abelia, sourwood, stewartia, clethra and some viburnums.

Lawns: Mow high and often with a sharp mower. Do not treat with anything during hot and dry weather.

Houseplants: Keep them happy so that they will keep you happy next winter.

General: This is the time to be energetic about garden care, even if the weather is hot, so that weeds and bugs don’t take over. The garden will repay your hard work with lushness and beauty in late summer and fall.

This entry was posted on Friday, July 25th, 2008 at 7:29 am by Bill Cary.
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About this blog
Features writer Bill Cary writes about gardening in the Hudson Valley.
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About the author
Katie Bill Cary grew up in Louisville, Ky. His gardening was limited to growing parsley and impatiens on the windowsill of Manhattan walkups until the mid-1990s when he bought a rundown old chicken farm on 8 acres in the Hudson Valley. Now he spends his weekends chasing deer, hacking away at invasive shrubs and vines and wondering why he doesn`t have more meadow and less lawn.


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