With a busy household and jobs, we are sometimes just too busy to get into the garden. If you acquire a second career in retirement or set out for traveling adventure. You still miss your garden and want to enjoy it when you can.
Here are some tips!
Maybe you’re a lazy gardener like me,….I don’t judge, but will let you know my tips for taking quick care of your garden during busy times.
In mid to late summer, pick on area after the other and trim all the spent blooms down to 6-8 inches.
The cooler weather and Fall rains will allow your perennials and shrubs to get a s bushy as they can. Just grab a handful of stems and cut straight across. For lavender, I make the plants as mounded as possible.
Some plants you know to be good reseeders can be left to form seedpods. This is a very simple way to ‘wintersow’…leave them all year without trimming. If you have a whole bed of the same flower, trim around the outside, like I did with my Columbine path and leave the taller seed forming stems as they are.
Set your watering system for every other day and for twice as long, up to an hour! I have my drip system set for every day, 20 minutes and the drippers give out 1 gallon an hour. For twenty minutes, that gives each area only one third of a gallon a day.
If you hand water, it can be quite a job, moving a hose from place to place. Remove the nozzle and set the hose to flood a garden bed. Just walk away and set a timer to remind you to move it. You’ll need to water less often and especially in summer, your plants will benefit from the soaking.
Deep watering is better for plants—it encourages their roots to grow down deep instead of moistening just the top inch. It also saves water, and you want your plants to be deep-rooted.
You can do this with sprinklers, too, like I do in my rock garden only once a month or so.
After ten or twelve years of adding pine mulch to my garden beds, I can tell you that weeding is a dream, now. Cover the bare ground with two inches of mulch and weeds will have a tough time sprouting.
Each Spring when I go around weeding,…I turn the old mulch into the soil and finish each one by adding more.
In subsequent years, any weeds are easier to pull out because the soil isn’t as hard. It becomes nice and loose and what Martha Stewart calls ‘friable.’
I’ve been lucky enough to get free mulch from logging and tree trimmers, but if you have to buy mulch, wait for a sale to buy it in bulk.
You’ll be amazed at how satisfying it is to simply rake your epaths. It’s good, quick exercise and neatens the garden like no other chore. I enjoy it, raking all the leaves and twigs and stones into the garden beds.
I hope you enjoy being ‘lazy’ in the garden….you know I do!
Take a day trip to Whiskey Falls... Come visit Whiskey Falls and the surrounding high…
Why do oaks drop more acorns some years and not others? If you have live…
Roadside treasures worth stopping for In the first week of July in the Sierra foothills…
Wow! Butterflies love these plants! Grow any of these for instant results and each is…
Your water-wise veggie garden Does everyone in our Mountain Community grow at least one tomato?…
Planting Cleveland sage on the meadow edges On this fine May day, I plant two…