Gardening Month by Month: September

 

Gardening Month by Month – September

September marks the beginning of the fall gardening season — a busy time of year for lucky warm-climate gardeners.

  • For best selection, buy bulbs as soon as they appear at the garden center. Most spring-blooming bulbs, such as tulips, hyacinths, and crocuses, will need to be pre-chilled in the fridge for 6-8 weeks to “fake” winter before planting outdoors.
  • Plant flower beds with cool-season flowers, such as pansies, calendula, candytuft, foxgloves, snapdragons, stock, and sweet alyssum.
  • Also plant cool-season veggies, such as broccoli, carrots, cauliflowers, lettuces and greens, potatoes, radishes, and peas.
 
 Dividing and Planting Perennials — Divide or plant perennials now that bloom in spring or early and mid-summer.
  • Keep up with watering chores. Weather stays warm this month, so keep up with watering all plants in the ground deeply but infrequently. Established natives will need water only once a month or so. If you know Santa Ana winds are coming, if you can, water thoroughly before they arrive.
  • Dusty leaves are a haven for mites and other sucking insects. Hose down your plants every so often to remove dust and dirt.

Feeding Roses — Fertilize roses to encourage fall bloom.

  • This month continue to fertilize warm-season lawns, such as Bermudagrass, but halt fertilizing of cool-season lawns, such as bluegrass.
  • Fertilize any acid-loving plants and any that may be showing an iron deficiency; for exmaple, young leaves appear yellow-green with dark green leaves. Acid-loving plants include azaleas, gardenias, blueberries, and camellias.

Fertilizing Plants — Continue to fertilize containers containing annuals and perennials.

  • Continue to keep up with watering chores. Soak plants in containers well. If you can’t keep up or they’re wilting anyway, move them to a shadier spot. Also give your compost heap an occasional dousing to promote necessary decomposition; and consider shading the heap to keep it moister longer.

Harvest – Keep harvesting for a continuous crop and watch for frost.

  • Harvest winter squash and pumpkins before frost, when their skin is hard enough to resist pressure from your thumbnail.
  • Set out transplants all month long of brocolli, cauliflower etc…
  • Pick your pears
  • Protect your grapes

Plant Hardiness Zone Map

 

 
 

 

 

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Howdy there, I'm Kat! I'm a southern gal who loves being a wife, mother, blogger, writer and a follower of Jesus Christ. I adore coffee, chocolate, sweet tea, essential oils, meows, guns, drag racing and TEXAS!
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