As summer’s blooms start to fade, autumn might seem like a fallow period for flower growers. Although the year’s floral productivity is gently winding down, the list of jobs for the following season’s harvest is just revving into gear. Once the August bank holiday is over, a certain focus descends over the flower farm to prepare for the next year. Embrace it, and accept it is virtually impossible to ever prepare as much as you aspire to. Whatever hard graft you do put in through autumn will pay dividends in a season full of flowers from spring onwards.
In addition to starting our hardy-annual seed sowing, early autumn is when we start thinking when to chit corms, dig up and divide dahlias, plant bulbs and mulch. There’s often a sense of time dissolving away as autumn progresses and days get shorter, colder and wetter.
All through autumn is when we focus on potting on our healthy seedlings, pinching out leading stems before planting out into their final growing positions.
In autumn we plant out hardy annuals inside the glasshouse and in outside beds. The key to successful overwintering is healthy well-established plants which will be best equipped to withstand the winter elements and marauding wildlife. Once we’ve potted on our seedlings, we allow them a month or so to grow and establish, planting from mid- to late autumn, depending on the weather and how much growth the plants have made. We don’t have a hard and fast rule for a final planting deadline. Ideally plants will have a few weeks of temperatures comfortably above freezing to establish before winter sets in. Before planting out, we leave the plants outside in a sheltered spot for around five days to acclimatise to being outside after their cosy glasshouse
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Butterfly bushes are hugely popular in the South for many reasons. They’re easy to grow and bloom all summer long in shades of pink, purple, white, and magenta. Of course, they also provide nectar-rich food for butterflies, which visit these pretty shrubs all season long. Since they bloom in the summer, some may think you should prune them in the fall, but the best time to prune butterfly bushes is actually in late winter to early spring.
There’s more to doing laundry correctly than just choosing the right wash cycle or incorporating the right laundry hacks. After clothes come out of the washer, you then must choose how to dry them. Air drying certain items (either by laying them flat or hanging them up to dry on the best drying rack) is crucial to maintaining their longevity. These include obvious articles of clothing like those made of delicate material—think silk blouses or lace pantyhose.
To cut or not to cut? That is the perennial question—pardon the pun—when it comes to cutting back plants in fall. With perennials, there is no one perfect time to cut back plants as a group. Some perennial plants should be pruned in fall, while others benefit from waiting until spring. This guide will help take the guess work out of autumn clean-up and provide insight into why you should prune the perennials on this list in fall.
Secrets to Easy Multiseason Container Garden Plantings Create stunning year-round container displays using this simple method from Heather Thomas of Cape Cottage Garden. Multiseason container garden planting made easy!
Timing is everything in successful gardening—this includes pruning! As we enter autumn, we share a selection of perennials you should never cut back in the fall if you want them to grow and bloom abundantly in spring and summer!
When most people picture the perfect kitchen, a few things might come to mind. From beautiful appliances to ample counter space to perfectly organized walk-in pantries, everyone has different musts on their list.
Bay leaf is a rich, aromatic herb popular in cuisines across the world. Replete with medicinal properties, it can be used dried, fresh in your food, or even in socks. You read that right! This natural remedy offers many benefits for many ailments, and here’s why you should keep bay leaf in socks!
If you watch the viral videos online of people cleaning their homes every Sunday, you may feel as though you need to level up your weekly routine a bit. It seems as though everyone is always turning their home or apartment upside down in order to address every corner and ensure that no area is left less than sparkling.
We're all guilty of it—when we're not sure what to do with something, it's off to the closet it goes, where it transforms into a problem for future you to tackle.
It wouldn’t be autumn without falling leaves. But after so many leaves start to pile up, what should you do with them in your yard? While many experts say you shouldn’t rake your leaves because moths and other beneficial bugs use them for laying eggs, home and garden pests like to call dying plant matter like fallen leaves home. Thus, it might be difficult to determine what exactly you should do with your fallen leaves.