July in the Garden

The Pantone colour for 2017 is totally inspired by nature - refreshing, renewing and reviving green

In bygone days, gardeners would spend mid-winter poring over seed catalogues and planting bare-rooted roses and fruit trees sent to them by snail-mail or rail. Nowadays, we go to well-stocked GCA nurseries in winter to buy what’s flowering and looking good!

Fern

Trend planting

The Pantone colour for 2017 is totally inspired by nature – refreshing, renewing and reviving green. Filling your house and patio with lacy ferns which are once again very fashionable, is definitely on trend! It is also said that ferns of all kinds clean the air and being surrounded by them, leaves one with a sense of well-being and calm. Stock up on your fern collection by adding the following easy-to-grow species: Maidenhair, (Adiantum) Rabbit’s Foot (Davallia), Holly Fern (Cyrtomium), Boston Fern (Nephrolepsis) and all the dainty varieties of Pteris.

Display them in bright light, away from cold drafts, keep their roots just moist, and feed regularly with a water soluble fertiliser.   

Lavender stoechas

 Lovely lavender

Winter is lavender planting time and here’s a selection of the best lavenders for your garden:

Calendula

Bedding besties – Calendula

If you did not get around to planting Calendulas in March or April you can still get flowering plants from your GCA. In winter, Calendula officinalis rubs shoulders with other popular winter annuals on the seedling tables in garden centres. Calendula is frost-hardy, growing about 45cm high and 30cm wide. It produces brightly coloured yellow and orange daisies. Plant calendulas with dianthus, pansies and violas, or mix them in with giant red mustard, tatsoi, Swiss chard and lettuce. Use the petals to garnish salads, sandwiches and desserts.

Sea thrift (Armeria maritima)

Colourful fillers

Every garden has ‘gaps’ – bits of bare soil between plants which can be filled in with pretty little winter-hardy plants like sea thrift (Armeria maritima), candytuft (Iberis sempervirens) and wild carnation (Dianthus caryophyllus).

Pelargonium

Plant pelargonium power

Hybridizers all over the world have a great time playing around with our pelargonium species (also known as ‘geraniums’), and the results are showy and prolific varieties for containers or the garden. Start your collection now to ensure bright spring colour. Although they are easy to grow, water wise and quite tough, some gardeners experience problems. Here are some hints and tips to help you along:

Cyclamen

Indoor plants

It’s cold outside, so brighten indoor spaces with vibrant, colourful indoor plants – bringing your gardening therapy inside. Winter-flowering house plants include cyclamens, gerberas (Barberton daisies), Begonia ‘Rieger’ hybrids, calandivas and pretty azaleas add an instantly warmer and welcoming touch to living and reception areas. They are also an excellent long lasting and value-for-money alternative to cut flowers.

Feeding roses

Rose care for July

In most areas, rose pruning is done in the second half of July, until the end of August in very cold regions. Gardeners who approach this task with trepidation can relax, as rose pruning is basically the removal of dead wood and weak and old twiggy stems, in order to attain a neat and pleasing shape, to open up space for new stems to grow, and to cut back to a desired height. After you have completed the pruning process, dig in the old mulch layer and freshly added compost into the soil around the bushes, feed with a rose fertiliser, renew the layer of mulch afterwards and water deeply at soil level. When watering in colder areas like the Free State, water in the early mornings.

 

Kumquat

Window box farming 

To enable you to mix a mean Pimms cocktail, you need some homegrown fruit and greenery. Combine the following plants in wintry window box:

Must-have tree

Wild Pear or Bushveld Bride (Dombeya rotundifolia) is a neat, well–shaped tree. The trunk is often straight and the bark is dark brown, almost black and very rough. The leaves are round and olive green in colour and turn yellow, orange and brown in autumn and fall off the tree in winter. In spring this tree becomes spectacularly covered in white blossoms reminding of pear blossoms. The Wild Pear is a tree that reaches approximately 6m x 4m in size. The crown is not very spreading and quite open and thin. This tree is truly frost hardy, as well as water wise and suitable for cold, windy gardens.

Ants

Pest watch

Cold winters result in rodents squatting indoors under the roof, in garden sheds, cupboards, under the fridge and behind bookcases. There are products available to dispatch them promptly, that are friendly to both humans and other animals. Visit your local GCA garden centre for some options. Ants and termites can also cause problems around the house as food and water becomes scarce. Enquire about the latest products in bait or systemic form to eradicate both ant and termite nests.

 

Frost netting between rows of veggies

Rescuing remedy

If a tender shrub is in a frost pocket, move it into a pot and place in a more protected spot, or protect with frost cloth. You can now also transplant deciduous trees or evergreen shrubs which are in the wrong place, with relative safety. If a hardy shrub does not look all that healthy, check if your protective mulch is not piled high around the shrub’s trunk. A high blanket of mulch holds moisture and prevents the water from getting down to the roots, which can attract fungi and other problems.

Handsful of good soil

Coastal gardening

(Western Cape, Northern Cape, Eastern Cape, and KwaZulu-Natal)

Cut back trees

Inland gardening

(Gauteng, Free State, North West, Mpumalanga and Limpopo)

 

For more information on bringing Life to your Garden, visit our website www.lifeisagarden.co.za or join the conversation on our Facebook page: www.facebook.com/lifeisagardensa.

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