September's mildness makes just about
any gardening tasks pleasant. The soil and air are warm but
not overly hot. Fresh summer produce is still delicious, but
production is slowing down. Garden tasks center around cleaning
up the old garden and getting the new one started. Seeds and
trans-plants of cool-weather-hardy crops can be planted now
for harvests from fall through early spring. Seeds sown now
for spring blooms and crops--especially edible peas and flowering
sweet peas--will encourage strong root and foliar development
that will survive most frosts, thrive, and bear sooner in
the spring. Soil amendments can be collected and dug in now
to break down over the winter, enriching the soil for next
year's gardens.
Sow beets, bok choy, broccoli, Brussels sprouts,
cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, chard, chervil, chives,
collards, endive, garlic, kale, kohlrabi, leeks, lettuce (in
our hot climate, this is the best time for sowing and transplanting
heading types), green onions, short-day bulb onions (like
Grano, Granex, and Walla Walla), parsley (the flat-leaf type
is more winter-hardy than the curly one), parsnips, peas,
white potatoes, radishes, spinach, and turnips.
Sow or transplant two or three times the amount
you would for spring harvest, as these overwintering crops
will grow very slowly, and you'll harvest only a leaf or two
a week from each lettuce plant.
As some herbs reseed themselves, transplant
them for overwintering either into the garden or indoors.
Dill, especially, seems to germinate better this way, so take
advantage of it.
Consider sowing some frost-tender herbs for
fresh use indoors all winter long. Seeds can be started either
indoors or outdoors now, but they must be moved indoors by
next month. This will allow them to acclimate to the warmer
and drier indoor conditions before it's too cold outdoors.
Quite a few herbs make attractive edible house-plants,
including both dark green and dark opal basil, chervil, chives,
dill, mint, oregano, parsley (the flat-leaf type is hardier
and more flavorful), rosemary, summer savory, sweet marjoram,
and thyme. Sow the seeds thickly to guarantee good germination,
as plants will grow slowly over the winter, and consequently
less foliage will be available for recipes.
Problems with seed ger-mination may be due
to old seed, soil that is too warm or has been allowed to
dry out, or seeds that were sown either too deeply or not
deeply enough.
Keep seedbeds moist and shaded from hot afternoon
sun until the seedlings develop two to four true leaves. After
transplanting them, mulch the soil lightly,and add more in
October and November for additional frost protection. Keep
the mulch an inch away from the plant stems, however, for
good air circulation and less potential for disease problems.
Vegetables that tolerate light frosts and temperatures
in the upper twenties will extend the growing season and provide
fresh produce all winter long. These include beets, Chinese
and savoy-leafed cabbages, collards, kale, butterhead and
heading and romaine lettuces, flat-leaf parsley, radishes,
turnips, savoy-leafed spinaches, and Swiss chard. Sow or transplant
two or three times the amount you would for spring harvest,
as these overwintering crops will grow very slowly, and you'll
harvest only a leaf or two at a time from each plant. Plants
that have developed deep root systems and mature leaves are
more tolerant to the cold. When these plants are three or
four inches in size before the first hard frost, they're mature
enough to be harvested throughout the fall, winter, and early
spring. These will bolt at the first real warmth of early
spring, though, so they can't be countedon to provide a crop
after that. But, by then, you'll have made the first spring
plantings, so the gap between harvests won't be too long.

Flame Seedless grapes almost ready
for munching right from the vine. Photo by Yvonne Savio |
When sowing cover crops for the fall and winter,
consider edible ones. Kale and rocket (roquette, arugula)
are full-flavored leafy vegetables that withstand freezing.
Both germinate in cool weather and are welcome fresh greens
for stir-fry and soups all winter long. In the spring, they
can be easily turned under as "green manure" when
preparing the soil for the main spring and summer crops.
Pinch out new blossoms and growing tips of
melons, winter squashes, and determinate tomatoes to force
growth into the fruits that have already set. Any that set
from now on won't ripen sufficiently before cool weather comes--unless
you want lots of immature green tomatoes around Thanksgiving.
Indeterminate cherry tomatoes, on the other hand, can be allowed
to continue setting, as the little fruits ripen more quickly.
Plant new trees while the soil is still warm
to encourage the roots to get established before going dormant
for the winter. Trim off deadwood and watersprouts (quickly-growing
upright shoots), but leave major pruning for January, when
the trees are dormant.
Feed citrus for the last time this year, and
water trees less as the weather cools and the rains (hopefully)
take over. Cupped, wilted, or falling leaves signal moisture
stress from hot winds, which can occur even when the soil
is damp. Provide lath, shade cloth, or other semi-open material
for protection. Pale green new citrus leaves may need a dose
of liquid chelated iron or a solution of fish emulsion and
kelp.
Remove and destroy fruit mummies on the ground
or still on the tree to reduce the chance of brown rot next
year.
Strawberries with whitish or yellowish leaves
need to be fertilized one last time with a high-nitrogen food.
After that, fertilizer them with a low-nitrogen, high-phosphorus,
and high-potassium fertilizer to help them harden off for
the winter.
Sun-dry the last prune plums, grapes, figs,
apples, and pears. Be sure to keep the moist pieces separate
so the surfaces can form a seal against spoilage.
Sow or transplant ageratums, alyssums, asters,
astilbes, baby blue eyes, baby's breath (gypsophila), bachelor's
buttons (cornflower), begonias, calendulas (winter or pot
marigold), campanulas (bellflower, canterbury bells), candytufts
(iberis), carnations (dianthus, pinks, sweet williams), chrysanthemums,
clarkias (godetia), columbines (aquilegia), coralbells (heuchera),
coreopsis (pot of gold, calliopsis), gloriosa daisy (rudbeckia,
black-eyed-susan, coneflower), Shasta daisy, English daisy
(bellis), delphiniums, forget-me-nots (myosotis), foxgloves,
gaillardias (blanket flower), gerberas (Transvaal daisy),
geums, hollyhocks, impatiens, larkspur, linarias, lobelias,
lunarias (honesty, silver dollar plant, money plant), nemesias,
nigellas (love-in-a-mist, Persian jewel), pansies, penstemons
(bearded tongue), phloxes, Iceland and Oriental and California
poppies, primroses (primula), salvias, snapdragons, statice
(limonium, sea lavender), stocks, sweet peas, verbena, and
violas.
Several companies offer individual varieties
and collections of California wildflowers that are grouped
by color or geographic area or other characteristics such
as drought resistance.
For very fragrant sweet peas, rely on some
old-fashioned varieties such as Antique Fantasy
and Painted Lady, or new cultivars that have the distinctive
fragrance bred back in, like Leamington, Rosy Frills,
Royal Wedding, and Snoopea.
Plant cyclamen and primroses where they're
shaded from the still-intense afternoon sun for color through
next spring.
Other fall-color perennials include fortnight
lily and Kaffir lily.
Bring in houseplants from their summer breather
outdoors after grooming them and thoroughly checking them
for pests. This is a good time to repot them in fresh potting
mix. Toss the "old" mix out into the garden or onto
the compost pile. Keep them in a bright area indoors for three
weeks to let them gradually get used to the darker, warmer,
and drier indoor conditions. Then move them to their winter
homes--but away from drafts and heaters.
Transplant perennials, ground covers, shrubs,
and vines while the soil and air temperatures are still warm
to give them a full season's root development over those planted
in the spring. Set them out in the cooler late afternoons
or evenings, and water them in with a mild solution of a balanced
fertilizer to promote new root growth and reduce transplant
shock. Mulch and shade them lightly for the first week. Add
more mulch in October and November for additional frost protection.

Zinnias are a riot of color at the
end of summer. |
Transplant shrubs and trees no later than six
weeks before the soil temperature drops to 40 degrees or lower
to give them enough time to settle in. This is especially
helpful for flowering crabapples, for-sythias, English ivies,
junipers, honey locusts, maples, pines, rhododendrons, spruces,
and yews.
Switch to a 0-10-10 fertilizer for azaleas,
camellias, gardenias, and rhododendrons to encourage formation
of next spring's blossom buds. Increase the spring bloom size
of azaleas, camellias, dahlias, and rhododendrons by remov-ing
half of the new flower buds. For extra-large camellia blooms,
remove all but one bud per branch; leave some further down
on the bush for later bloom.
Prolong blooming on tuberous begonias, dah-lias,
and fuchsias by pinching off faded flowers. Water them frequently
while the weather is still hot, and then feed them with a
low-nitrogen, high-phosphorus fertilizer before they begin
to go dormant.
Divide and replant crowded perennials such
as agapanthus, coralbells, Shasta daisies, daylilies, phloxes,
and yar-row. Stake tall-growing mums before they get too top-heavy
and fall over, unless you prefer a cascading or curly-stemed
display. Feed mums until the buds show color and begin to
open.
Cut back alyssum, coreopsis, marguerite and
Shasta daisies, delphiniums, dianthus, felicias, gaillardias,
geraniums, ivies, lantanas, lobelias, petunias, and santolinas
to one-third or one-half of their present size. However, don't
cut them back beyond the green foliage to the older woody
growth, as this may kill the plant.
Root the cuttings of semi-woody plants, including
fuchsias, geraniums, hydrangeas, ivies, and mar-guerite daisies.
Remove all but the top four leaves, and bury at least two
nodes (but preferably four or five) on the stem in damp sand
or a peat moss-and-perlite mix. They should be ready to transplant
in two months.
Plant iris rhizomes, daylily crowns, and lily
bulbs in well-drained soil amended with organic matter. Irises
prefer to sit on top of the soil, with only their roots buried.
Daylilies like to be one inch below the soil surface. Lilies
need a three-inch layer of humus on top of their roots. Irises
can take all the sun they can get, daylilies will bloom nicely
in full sun or partial shade, and lilies need their bases
shaded but foliage in the sun. Plant lily bulbs as soon as
you get them, as they don't ever go fully dormant.
Trim bearded iris foliage fans to about eight
inches from the rhizome. Plant new irises and divide others
if they have less than an inch of soil space between them
or if they didn't bloom well last spring. Discard the old,
leafless center sections, trim the roots of the newer ones
to two inches in length, and plant them just below the soil
surface. Don't fertilize them, but water them in well after
planting and every other week until the rains take over.
This is the last month to prune roses and feed
them for their last bloom cycle before going dormant. Hold
off on severe pruning until plants are fully dormant in Jan-uary.
Feed plants lightly, and water. Continue to water them only
in the mornings to lessen mildew and other wet-foliage-at-sunset-with-warm-evenings
disease prob-lems.
Bulbs to plant for spring bloom can be purchased
now for first-choice quality. These include alliums, amaryllis,
anemones, brodiaeas, crocuses, daffodils, freesias (so fragrant!),
fritillarias, galanthus, baby glads, glory-of-the-snows, grape
and Dutch and wood hyacinths, Dutch irises, ixias, leucojums,
lycoris, montbretias, narcissus, paperwhites, peonies, ranunculus,
scilla, snowdrops, sparaxis, tigridia, tritonia, triteleia,
tulips, dog-tooth violets, watsonias, and winter aconites.
Choose big, plump bulbs, as these have the most stored food
and will produce the largest and most numerous blooms over
the longest period of time. They cost a bit more, but they'll
provide a great deal more pleasure when they bloom. Refrigerate
hyacinths and tulips for six to eight weeks before planting
them in November.
Especially fragrant freesia cultivars include
Athene, Allure, Demeter, Excelsior,
Golden Wave, Mirabel, Pink Westlind,
Snowdon, and Welkin.
If you like having blooms in the lawn, these
are good for naturalizing, and the ripening foliage following
bloom won't interfere with mowing the lawn: Chionodoxa, eranthis,
muscari, ornithogalum, and puschkinia.
Don't forget to buy some bulbs just for indoor
forcing color from Thanksgiving through January. Good choices
include amaryllis, crocus, freesias, lily-of-the-valley, paperwhites,
and tulips.
Store the bulbs in a cool, well-ventilated
area until you're ready to plant them. Chill crocus, daffodil,
hyacinth, narcissus, and tulip bulbs in a paper bag on the
lowest shelf in the refrigerator--at about 40 degrees--for
at least six weeks. Wrap them in paper--not plastic--bag,
since the bulbs are alive and must breathe.
Enrich the soil where the bulbs are to be planted
with com-post, bone meal, and granite dust or wood ashes (but
not from charcoal briquets used in the barbecue, which contain
harmful chemicals). Also, add some nitrogen, as it is easily
washed from the soil by winter rains, and bulbs need a small
but continuous supply all winter long for strong growth of
the foliage and the bloomstalk.
For a long-lasting spring display, plant some
early, mid-season, and late-blooming bulbs every other week
from October through mid-December, and again beginning in
late January.
Depth of planting also affects when the bulbs
will bloom: shallower plantings will bloom sooner, and deeper
plantings will bloom later. If you want everything to bloom
for one spectacular display, plant the bulbs at the same time
and at the same depth. If you prefer color over several months'
time, plant bulbs every several weeks, and vary the planting
depths each time you plant.
Plant autumn-blooming saffron crocus now for
a November harvest. Each corm produces from one to three flowers,
and about six corms should provide suffi-cient saffron--just
the three tiny red stamens in each bloom--for each cooking
or baking recipe. Corms are available from Nichols Garden
Nursery, 1190 North Pacific Hwy., Albany, Oregon 97321.
Dry flowers for arrangements that you've grown
yourself. The easiest to dry are baby's breath, bachelor's
button, bells of Ireland, lavender, scabiosa, statice, strawflower,
and yarrow. All but the bells of Ireland are best air-dried:
tie a few stems into a loose bunch, and hang it up, flower
heads down, in a cool, dark, dry place for several weeks.
The exception is bells of Ireland--stand these upright in
a container with a half-inch of water; flowers will dry as
the water evaporates.
Save the stalks of tall sunflowers, stripped
of their branches and leaves, to use next year as trellises
for peas and beans.
Start or reseed lawns. Keep the soil surface
moist so seeds germinate and seedling roots get a good start.
Feed and water established lawns; continue mowing at two inches
in height.
Shrubs with colorful berries to plant now for
fall and winter accents include abelia, barberry, bottlebrush,
forsythia, holly, hydrangea, oleander, pyracantha, quince,
and toyon.
This is the perfect time of year to plant a
tree to beautify your yard--the roots will get well established
before they go dormant, ready for the spring surge of both
foliage and root growth.
Decide what you want from a tree--where it
will be planted and for what purpose. If you want summer shade
for the house, a deciduous tree planted on the south side
would be appropriate. If you prefer a pleasant window view,
a grouping of silver birches might be nice.
Fall colors come alive with many trees, including
beech, birch, coral tree, gingko, liquidambar, magnolia, maidenhair,
Japanese and other maples, crape myrtles, persimmon, Chinese
pistache, sour gum, Chinese tallow, tulip tree (named for
its tulip-shaped leaves), and zelkova.
Once you've made a preliminary choice, consider
the mature size of the tree--does the area allow the tree
sufficient space when it's mature? Have you planned for the
different needs of the shaded and moist soil underneath its
widespread limbs? When all these considerations seem to fit,
purchase it and plant it.
Avoid planting trees that are prone to wind
damage. These include acacia, ash, cypress, elm, eucalyptus,
liquidamber, California pepper, and pine.
Shape evergreen hedges for the last time this
year.
Continue replenishing your compost pile. Spent
annuals and vegetables add a lot of bulk now, along with grass
and other garden clippings, and non-greasy trimmings from
the kitchen. But, leave out plants that are obviously infected
with diseases--destroy or dispose of these, instead. Chop
up bulky items to help them decompose faster. Layer greenery
with a bit of soil and dry matter. Keep the pile moist but
not waterlogged, and turn it or loosen it up every other week
or so to let in air.
Dig in organic soil amendments to break down
over the witner, enriching the soil for next year's garden.
As you clean up dried foliage from bulbs, mark
their locations, so you don't damage them when digging later
in the season.
Hose off plant foliage--both top and underneath
leaf surfaces--to lessen insect populations. This is especially
helpful to get rid of aphids, caterpillars, mealybugs, spider
mites, and whiteflies on beans, collards, kale, tomatoes,
and roses. Be sure to do this early enough in the day (preferably
early morning) so that the foliage can dry completely by sunset.
An old paring or putty knife can be used to
cut transplants out of a flat or to aid harvesting.
Old tires can serve a variety of uses besides
as tree swings. Single ones filled with soil form small-scale
raised beds. Use a porous mixture of potting mix for extra
good drainage. Several tires stacked on top of one another
form deep barrels for potatoes and tomatoes. Overlap tires
up a slope, filling each with soil and planting ground cover
for excellent reinforcement of unstable embankments or where
there's little soil. The tires retain heat, resulting in extra
late-fall and early-spring growth.
Use a garden hose to help plan a curved landscape
area. Its position can be changed easily until the desired
shape is determined.
Cut off the bottoms of plastic gallon jugs,
use the tops as mini-greenhouses, and use the bottoms as saucers
for pots or shallow starting trays. Cut a slit from one side
to the center, and cut an inch-wide hole at the center for
a perfect cutworm guard for tomato plants next spring. |