
Vegetables
Given rich soil, zucchini, marrows and pumpkin are easily grown in the home garden, although in cooler districts pumpkins need a hot, dry summer to do well. Bush marrows require less room than the trailing types but zucchini are more popular than marrows, so seed of the latter can be difficult to obtain.
Sow the seeds now in pots or seed boxes. Mini greenhouses are ideal for these tender vegetables, as is a bottomless box, with a square of glass set over the top and placed in the warmest part of the garden. Plants can be put in their permanent place from the end of the month, or once the likelihood of frost has passed. When fruits form, liquid manure will encourage good growth. Watering is needed only when the soil is dry in the plants’ earlier stages.
Celery can be sown in the same way as marrows or pumpkins. Trenches can be prepared now for planting out celery early in December. Dump plenty of manure in the bottom of the trench and top with soil but leave the surface 5cm to 10cm lower than the surrounding garden to help retain moisture, as celery will quickly go to seed if the ground dries out.
Flowers
Outdoor fuchsias, Californian tree poppy (Romneya coulteri) and willows grown for bark effects can be pruned now.
Young, rooted pieces can be taken from the outside of violet plants and the central portion of old clumps discarded. Violets do best in partial shade with rich, heavy soil.
Herbaceous perennials, such as michaelmas daisies, can still be increased by taking side growths with a few roots attached.
Hardy annuals can be sown outdoors this month. Clarkia, asters, nasturtiums, Calendula and sweet peas are good options. Dwarf sweet peas do not need staking. The soil for sweet peas should be well-limed and the ground worked to a fine crumb. Phosphate worked into the soil (30g per sq m) will give the seedlings a good start and a sturdy root system.
Lawns that have become patchy because of grass-grub damage or the removal of weeds on a large scale can be brought back to order with a dressing now of one part superphosphate, three parts sulphate of ammonia mixed and spread at the rate of 30g per sq m. Apply this mix now and in early autumn as growth restarts after summer.
Dwarf annuals for a rockery or the front of garden beds include Phacelia (blue shades), Nemophila (blue), Linum grandiflorum and Limnanthes (yellow). Linaria produces flowers resembling miniature snapdragon on slender stems, 15cm-25cm high.
Fruit
Tomatoes can be planted now in unheated greenhouses. The ground or container mixture does not need to be over-rich, as fertilisers applied when the fruits set will provide a heavy crop to the ripening stage.
The soil must be free from disease, though, and growing tomatoes in pots or bags of new mix each season is recommended. In autumn, put the soil on the vegetable garden.