Fall Cleanup Tips Before The Winter Hits
There are many reasons to pay attention to your lawn before winter comes. The weather becomes cooler and working outside becomes a little more comfortable. The soil also becomes easier to work with because the moisture is more even spread as opposed to the spring. See below for some additional tips worth considering.
• Plant trees, shrubs and perennials, many of which will be marked down at the garden center. Do this before the ground freezes and make sure to water these new plantings regularly before the lawn freezes.
• Don't fertilize new plantings or other plants in the landscape. Fertilizing now will spur new growth, which won't have a chance to acclimate before winter arrives, making plants susceptible to damage. It's all right to add a dusting of compost in the gardens as you clean up the beds.
• Plant spring-blooming bulbs. Ideally, the bulbs should have four to six weeks in the ground to form a root mass before the ground freezes. Water after planting.
• Don't prune spring blooming shrubs, such as lilac, forsythia and big-leaf hydrangea. Pruning them now will remove next spring's flowers.
• Pull frost-damaged annuals from the garden and bring out the cool-season replacements, such as pansies, snapdragons, nemesia, larkspur or ornamental cabbage and kale. Summer loving petunias and mealycup sage are quite tolerant of cool weather and will carry their color into late fall.
• Cut back frost-damaged perennials, such as hosta, daylilies and hardy hibiscus. Any perennial that gets unattractive when cold weather hits can be cut back. Cut back perennials as close to the ground as possible.
• Some perennials, such as coneflowers, sedums and Japanese anemone, keep on giving all winter with attractive seed heads, which also feed finches, juncos and other birds that stay in the area.
• Fertilize the lawn one last time in late October in the northern Midwest and November in the lower region. This late dose helps the lawn green up earlier and reduces the need to fertilize in spring.
• Send established trees, shrubs and perennials into winter with a good soaking of water, especially if there has been little or no rain.
• Remove plant debris from garden beds, especially where there were infestations of insects or diseases. The fallen leaves, stems or seed heads harbor these problems and allow them to return next year.
• Mulch leaves with the mower or rake them from the lawn. Leaves, especially the large ones like maples and sycamores, can smother and kill the grass, and invite insects and diseases.
There are many reasons to pay attention to your lawn before winter comes. The weather becomes cooler and working outside becomes a little more comfortable. The soil also becomes easier to work with because the moisture is more even spread as opposed to the spring. See below for some additional tips worth considering.
• Plant trees, shrubs and perennials, many of which will be marked down at the garden center. Do this before the ground freezes and make sure to water these new plantings regularly before the lawn freezes.
• Don't fertilize new plantings or other plants in the landscape. Fertilizing now will spur new growth, which won't have a chance to acclimate before winter arrives, making plants susceptible to damage. It's all right to add a dusting of compost in the gardens as you clean up the beds.
• Plant spring-blooming bulbs. Ideally, the bulbs should have four to six weeks in the ground to form a root mass before the ground freezes. Water after planting.
• Don't prune spring blooming shrubs, such as lilac, forsythia and big-leaf hydrangea. Pruning them now will remove next spring's flowers.
• Pull frost-damaged annuals from the garden and bring out the cool-season replacements, such as pansies, snapdragons, nemesia, larkspur or ornamental cabbage and kale. Summer loving petunias and mealycup sage are quite tolerant of cool weather and will carry their color into late fall.
• Cut back frost-damaged perennials, such as hosta, daylilies and hardy hibiscus. Any perennial that gets unattractive when cold weather hits can be cut back. Cut back perennials as close to the ground as possible.
• Some perennials, such as coneflowers, sedums and Japanese anemone, keep on giving all winter with attractive seed heads, which also feed finches, juncos and other birds that stay in the area.
• Fertilize the lawn one last time in late October in the northern Midwest and November in the lower region. This late dose helps the lawn green up earlier and reduces the need to fertilize in spring.
• Send established trees, shrubs and perennials into winter with a good soaking of water, especially if there has been little or no rain.
• Remove plant debris from garden beds, especially where there were infestations of insects or diseases. The fallen leaves, stems or seed heads harbor these problems and allow them to return next year.
• Mulch leaves with the mower or rake them from the lawn. Leaves, especially the large ones like maples and sycamores, can smother and kill the grass, and invite insects and diseases.
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