November
Gardening Calender
What a lovely month in the garden! There
is plenty to do, and weather to enjoy the
fresh new growth and abundance of flowers.
KITCHEN GARDEN
Vegetables
-
Fill containers with Tui
Tomato Mix and plant smaller varieties of
tomatoes such as ‘Tommy Toe’,
‘Sweet 100’ and ‘Tumbling
Tom’. Sweet basil and tomatoes are
good to grow together as well as to eat
together so plant a few of these in the
same pot.
-
Zucchini are quick and easy
to grow in a sunny, sheltered spot. Dig
in Blood and Bone and compost prior to planting.
Avoid wetting the leaves and fruit as they
are susceptible to powdery mildew, applying
water directly to the root zone.
-
Chilli seeds can be sown
straight into a pot or garden bed or buy
seedling plants from the garden centre.
One or two plants will be enough for most
families. For mild flavour harvest when
green or wait until they are fully coloured
- they just get hotter. In a warm, frost-free
area they will survive and continue cropping
for several years.
-
Sow dwarf and climbing beans.
Scarlet Runner beans need a warm sheltered
position to ensure a good fruit set.
-
Sow sweetcorn into ground
that has plenty of added compost. It is
advisable to sow in 2 or 3 short rows or
blocks rather than one long one as plants
will support each other and pollination
to give setting of the seed is better. As
seed germinates, thin to about 15cm apart.
Hoe to keep free of weeds but not too deeply
as the roots are near the surface. Mounding
up the soil around the plants will help
stop them being blown over.
-
Sow directly into the garden
beetroot, broccoli, carrots, cucumbers,
leeks, pumpkin, radish, silverbeet, spring
onions, swede and turnips.
- When six good leaves have formed on the
runners of courgettes, cucumbers and pumpkins
pinch out the tips. Pinch out again at intervals
to ensure there will be plenty of fruiting
laterals and train them up a trellis.
- Newly sown seed needs consistent moisture.
Fill open seed drills with water several hours
before sowing.
- Plant out celery, egg plants, peppers, potatoes
and tomatoes.
Regular planting of salad greens every few
weeks will ensure a constant supply over summer.
- Thin out the previous months sowings and
side dress with a general fertilizer.
- Mound up potatoes.
- Side dress cabbages, lettuces and spinach
with a fertilizer high in nitrogen ie blood
and bone or sulphate of ammonia.
- Use a push hoe to keep remove weeds. This
also helps to conserve soil moisture.
- Keep well watered to maintain steady growth.
Mulching will help preserve soil moisture
and should be carried out after heavy rain
to be effective over the drier months. Fertilise
with blood and bone before applying.
- Place Tui Quash everywhere in the garden
where snails like to hide to prevent them
getting into your crops.
- Look out for white butterflies laying eggs
on brassicas. Dust your plants with Derris
Dust to kill the caterpillars.
Herbs
- Lemon verbena can be clipped back to help
the growth of lateral branches. Propagate
these cuttings for additional plants.
- Coriander seeds can be sown in seed trays
and given warm conditions to germinate. Sow
new seeds every three to four weeks for a
continuous supply over summer.
- Plant basil seedlings in pots to be grown
indoors or on a windowsill. Water basil in
the heat of the day to make plants really
thrive. Do not overwater. It will not grow
if temperatures drop below 10C and below 4C
will kill it.
Fruit
- Apples – Trim large, leafy and non-productive
branches out to let sun into the centre, ensuring
a better and tastier crop.
- Fruit on nectarine, peach and pear trees
should be thinned to a number that the tree
can expect to carry and develop. Old trees
carrying a heavy crop of fruit will benefit
from a dressing of fertilizer.
- Pear and cherry slug can cause damage for
fruit trees and related ornamentals and blossom
trees. The slug graze the top of the leaf
surface, leaving them looking chewed and tattered.
Spray with Yates Success.
- Berryfruit such as blackberry and boysenberry
should be sprayed with Bravo for dry berry
disease.
- Spray citrus trees with Champion Copper
for verrucosis. Insects can be controlled
with Target or Nature’s Way Insect Spray.
- Strawberries will be starting to fruit.
Water is needed if the fruit is to be plump
and tasty. Cover plants with bird-netting
to protect fruit from being eaten by birds.
Keep plants free from competing weeds.
- Yellow pustules on raspberry leaves are
the first sign of rust. Later these will turn
black. Spray with Yates Nature’s Way
Fungus Spray at the first sign.
ORNAMENTAL GARDEN
- Snap off finished rhododendron flowers.
Apply a thin even layer of mulch out to the
drip line of each plant to enable the surface
roots to spread and keep cool over summer.
- Trim back shoots on roses which have had
flowers cutting to three or four buds below
old flower heads or to the first proper outward
facing bud with five leaves.
- Plant heat hardy perennials with silver
leaves- they will require less watering over
any hot dry spells. The large furry leaves
of Stachys byzantina ‘Big Ears’
make dense mats of foliage, smothering out
weeds and trapping in moisture – a living
mulch. The summer flowers will attract bees
and butterflies.
- Zantedeschia or calla lilies planted now
will provide displays of intense colour in
summer. Plant the tubers in pots or a sunny
part of the garden that is well drained and
enriched with compost. Liquid feed regularly
and they should flower in about 8 weeks.
- Plant gladiolus to late summer flowering.
Amaryllis bulbs can be planted in a warm,
sheltered position or grown as an indoor flowering
plant.
- Prune once flowering rambling roses after
flowering as winter pruning will cut off the
following years flowers.
- Prune perfumed lilacs after flowering, feed
with Rose Fertiliser and, a few weeks later
sprinkle some Lime or Dolomite lime around
the plants.
Sprinkle lime or Dolomite lime around the
base of lavenders every couple of years.
- Children (and adults too) love monarch butterflies
and what better way to attract them to your
garden than having several swan plants. Pick
up 2 – 3 plants to keep your caterpillars
fed over summer and cover one with fine netting
to give it the chance to grow larger without
getting demolished by the very hungry caterpillars!!
- Containers will need daily watering as the
weather gets warmer and plants are growing
quickly.
- Prepare for the coming summer by checking
or installing a watering system. Remove competing
weeds and spread new mulch over garden beds.
Sprinkle on Blood and Bone and only apply
mulch after heavy rain. Don’t make the
mulch layer so thick or dense that it ends
up acting as a barrier to water penetration.
- Plant up hanging baskets now so they will
be ready to give as stunning Christmas presents.
Always use the best potting mix when planting
up baskets and include extra watering crystals
to help prevent them drying out. Be right
on trend with baskets of herbs, salad greens
or tumbling tomatoes.
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