What to do in your garden this week
Vegetables
In warmer districts, where no more frosts are expected,
runner and butter beans can be sown.
In most gardens, it is better to delay growing these tender
vegetables outdoors and to get seed started under cover.
This is also true of sweet corn and outdoor tomatoes.
From the time they germinate, runner beans, such as Scarlet
Runner, take 90 days to mature, while dwarf or butter beans
will produce crops in 60 days.
The latter are generally recommended for smaller gardens but
a few runner beans can be grown anywhere they can climb.
If sowing them in their permanent position, put runner bean
seeds about 5cm apart around a bean teepee or against the
netting or trellis they are to climb.
Pinching out the tips to make bushier plants is a waste of
effort, as it reduces the crop.
Like climbing types, butter bean seeds should be set 5cm
apart, with 60cm between rows.
Plant out cabbages, cauliflower, lettuces, parsley and
silverbeet, and check that autumn-sown broad beans have
adequate support.
Sow spinach and orach where they are to mature.
Orach (Atriplex hortensis), or red mountain spinach,
is a low-growing, purple-leaved vegetable cooked like
spinach.
Sow white turnips, spring onions and quick-maturing mini
beetroot, such as Bonny Baby.
Small beetroot plants can be transplanted to fill gaps.
Main-crop beetroot can be sown next month.
Turnips and beetroot should not be grown in soil where traces
of animal manure remain, as this causes the roots to fork.
Main crop potatoes - Rua, Moonlight, Red Rascal (the improved
form of Desiree), Red King, Heather, Iwa and Agria, for
example - can be planted now in areas that experience hot
summers.
In cooler districts, wait until next month.
Flowers
Many spring-flowering shrubs are pruned as soon as they have
finished blooming.
This is so the plants can make new growth over summer and
autumn, as it is on this new wood that they flower next
season.
Clematis, which has its peak flowering next month, is
often left to grow unchecked but most types can be pruned
hard after flowering.
Cut C. montana to 1m above ground, leaving only a main
stem with two to four buds to develop.
Rhododendrons and azaleas can still be planted.
They are shallow-rooted, with fibrous roots close to the
surface, making them easy to transplant.
Set the shrubs with the highest roots just 2cm to 3cm below
the soil surface.
Adequate moisture is vital to this group, so mulch around the
roots with rotted autumn leaves, pine needles or old sawdust
from wood that is not tanalised.
Being woodland plants, rhododendrons and azaleas need an acid
soil, so never apply lime.
Azaleas come in two types, evergreen and deciduous and the
latter have colourful autumn foliage in orange or red.
Winter roses (Helleborus) can be divided this month.
They do better in semi-shade rather than full shade, and can
be boosted with leaf mould or well-rotted cow manure..
Lawns can be planted or renewed now.
Rake any bare patches to give a slightly rough surface, then
scatter with a lawn-grass mix - usually chewings fescue and
brown top seed in a 2:1 ratio - then cover with fine soil and
press down lightly.
Water if the soil is dry, then cover with netting to stop
birds eating the seed.
Fruit
Grafting of apples, pears and other fruit trees is usually
done this month.
This is an important way of saving heritage fruit trees and
courses on how to graft trees, particularly apples, are run
each season by special-interest groups.
Raspberries put in over winter should be cut back to 30cm
above the ground to encourage new stems (canes) to grow over
summer for a better crop next year.
This treatment is also recommended for blackberries,
tayberries, boysenberries, loganberries and marionberries.
New blackcurrant bushes should be pruned to about 25cm above
the ground but red and white currants need only to have last
season's growth trimmed by about half.
This growth is identified by its lighter bark. Gooseberries
are pruned in the same way as redcurrants.
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