Caring for plants

Take advantage of time-saving greens that’ll give you goodness to eat while waiting for other crops to mature.

Nurture your garden by sowing edibles and flowers. Give your roses some attention and maintain your existing crops for an abundant harvest.

Many summer-flowering annuals start coming to the end of their flowering season and need to be removed. As such, collect ripe seeds from flowers you wish to grow for next season and begin preparing seed and flower beds for autumn planting.

Blooms to sow

Best for indoors

Adorn the indoors with your own love palm (Chamaedorea elegans). It is small, slow-growing palm trees, reaching a full height of about one meter. Celebrated for its attractive foliage, compact shape and decorative cluster form, love palms are ideal indoor plants that thrive in low to moderate light.

Love palm (Chamaedorea elegans).

Caring for flowers

 Rose maintenance

Greens to sow and plant

Chinese water chestnut.

 Tending to the harvest

Plant nursery treasures

Buy ready-to-plant strawberries, which you can hang in baskets or transplant into containers. Feed and water regularly to enjoy its beauty, even after fruiting.

Your nursery has the latest, fully grown, dwarf veggies that are ready to harvest. These varieties include chillies, cherry tomatoes and fresh loose-leaf lettuce varieties. Take advantage of time-saving greens that’ll give you goodness to eat while waiting for other crops to mature.

Capsicum annuum.

Pesky critters

Look out for red spider mites which are problematic in periods of drought and very hot weather. Use the correct insecticides to control these pests on plants such as fruit trees, roses and shrubs. Red spider mites can also destroy annuals like tomatoes if too heavily infested.

There’s always something to do in the garden and always a plant in need of a little attention. Caring for your crop offers delicious rewards while tending to blooms provides an ongoing stream of colourful delights.

Visit the Life is a Garden website www.lifeisagarden.co.za for more gardening inspiration or join the conversation on its Facebook page lifeisagardensa.

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