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Daily gardening will help in the long run

Get busy in the greenhouse. Don’t have one? Well then get creative and make some DIY plant shelters.

- COMPILED BY BARBARA SMITH

Get busy in the greenhouse

Plant the summer-heat loving crops now – tomatoes, eggplants, chillies, capsicums and cucumbers undercover. If you can get them, large grafted plants are well worth the money as they start producing earlier. Sow basil seed or transplant seedlings indoors, it’s still a bit soon to plant outdoors except in the warmest areas.

There might be frequent spring showers outdoors, but remember that all plants grown undercover are dependent on the gardener for all irrigation. New seedlings and newly sown seeds are especially vulnerable to drying out. Water with a fine spray from a misting bottle or the fine rose of a watering can – and warm the water first, so seedlings don’t get a shock.

Be generous with fertiliser­s but don’t overdo it. Regular dilute liquid feeds are better than a highly concentrat­ed dose all at once. Remember the pollinator­s. Attract them into the greenhouse by planting the nectar-laden plants they love in or near your undercover growing area. Be prepared to get busy with a paintbrush if your area lacks bees. For tomatoes, brush past or stroke the plants to dislodge and spread the pollen.

Sort out sun protection – for you and your plants! Slather on the sunscreen and wear a hat, even this early in the season the sun can burn.

Shade the most delicate seedlings in your glasshouse too. Whatever system you use, it needs to be well-anchored so it doesn’t fall onto the plants and reversible so it can be taken away in winter. If you use paint to whiten a tunnel-house panel or glasshouse pane for shade, make sure it is water-based, so it can be washed off. A shaded spot is no advantage in the winter.

If you don’t have a greenhouse, get creative

Now’s a great time for sowing undercover. Lean a spare window frame against the side of the house. Or pull a plastic bag over four sticks to make an effective plastic house for the time it takes to sprout and raise your seedlings to the point where they can go it alone. Or an upturned jar or clear plastic packaging can provide the conditions needed for successful seedling production.

In my garden, the clear plastic cover over the raised bed I wrote about a few weeks ago became too hot, so I’ve replaced it with insect mesh. It allows the rain through and provides protection from the wind. The temperatur­e is slightly warmer under the cover than outside, but there’s enough air movement to keep the plants from cooking.

Out with the old and in with the new

The best celery I’ve ever grown was a great standby all winter. There were still edible stalks left, but the plants were thickening in the centre indicating that they are about to throw up a flower stem. White butterflie­s were showing too

much interest in the kale and the poor spinach plants were past their prime.

I could have got a few more meals off these plants, but I decided it was time to clear the decks to make room for summer crops. The soil has been refreshed with compost and sheep pellets.

I’ve planted a few radishes, spring onions and lettuces but left plenty of room for successive plantings of salad greens so I’ll have a steady supply over a long period rather than everything ready at once.

Keep on top of regular jobs

Try to do a couple of small tasks every day so that you aren’t faced with a daunting to-do list on the weekend. Breaking up big jobs into several small tasks makes the work feel more manageable.

There’s no need to weed the entire garden in one go – spend 10 minutes weeding around the garlic and shallots today (they’ll grow much better without competitio­n) and tackle another bed tomorrow.

Spending time in the garden daily helps you spot problems before they get out of control.

Aphids on new rose leaves or broad beans? Squish with your fingers or wash off with soapy water. Caterpilla­rs on the brassicas? Squash caterpilla­rs and flick off the eggs with a paint brush. Cover plants with insect mesh to prevent more eggs being laid. Rusty mint? Cut back to ground level. Healthy fresh leaves will grow back in time to flavour your new potatoes. But don’t concentrat­e on the problems. Take time to spot what’s coming into bloom, enjoy the scents, bird song and fresh air on your daily tour of the garden.

Plant an avocado tree

Love smashed avocado on toast but wince at the price? If you live in a warm part of the country, have a spacious garden and welldraini­ng soil you could grow your own. Choose a warm, sheltered position for your valuable avocado tree. The site should be protected from wind and be warm and sunny. Avocado trees are salt-tolerant so can be grown in coastal locations. The best time to plant is in late spring when the soil temperatur­e is rising and there’s less chance of wet feet.

Avocados have male and female flowers and different varieties open the male and female flowers at different times of the day. Most avocados will need a pollinator tree nearby, or you can buy grafted trees with a couple of complement­ary varieties. Careful choice of varieties could give you avocados nearly all year round. For informatio­n about varieties and fruiting times, see Incredible Edibles.

If you only have a small space but long to grow your own avocados, you could try the close-planting method of four or more mini trees described at AvoPro. Growing several varieties together keeps the trees small and also provides cross pollinatio­n which helps avocados set, and hold, more fruit each season.

Off with their heads – tough love deadheadin­g

It takes determinat­ion to snip off the last brave bloom still flowering when all its neighbours are dead or dying but a ruthless short back and sides when deadheadin­g perennials does look better in the long run.

The plant will have a balanced shape and the next flush of flowers will synchronis­e with each other.

Alternativ­ely you can stagger flowering over a longer period but cutting back different parts of a plant (or individual plants within a mass planting) to different heights. This looks more natural for plants in a border rather than a standalone feature plant in a pot.

Note this advice is, ‘‘Do as I say, not do as I do’’. I’m rarely hard-hearted enough to go in for the chop when a flower could last another day or two.

Gardening by the maramataka

Kōanga (spring) has arrived. Whiringa-ā-rangi is the fifth month of the maramataka and the traditiona­l time for final land preparatio­n for crops. We should now be fully immersed in the emergence of spring following the flowering cues of specific trees and bushes such as the tī kōuka (cabbage tree).

At this time of year, it is not only plants that reawaken: insects and animals such as manu (birds) change their behaviour and provide us the impetus to get outside and prepare.

For summer crops, this is the time to open the ground, turn the soil to expose it to the warmth of the sun and to allow nature to assist in pest control. Birds will gravitate to feed on beetle and moth larvae. In the very north, this month represents planting by the second week at latest. This timing will be later – maybe even next month – as you move south.

Soil temperatur­es matter and reading the soil through the return of new grass growth or emergence of spring weeds such as pōhue (convolvulu­s, native and introduced), huainanga (fat-hen) or amaranthus (morewhero) gives a sure sign of the soil’s readiness to support spring cropping.

 ?? ??
 ?? BARBARA SMITH/STUFF ?? Insect mesh provides shelter from wind and cold as well as pests.
BARBARA SMITH/STUFF Insect mesh provides shelter from wind and cold as well as pests.
 ?? ?? Avocados have one of the easiest seeds to germinate but the seedlings can take up to 10 years to fruit, and the resulting avocados are likely to be of poor quality – so it’s worth buying a tree grafted with a couple of complement­ary varieties for reliable pollinatio­n and an earlier harvest.
Avocados have one of the easiest seeds to germinate but the seedlings can take up to 10 years to fruit, and the resulting avocados are likely to be of poor quality – so it’s worth buying a tree grafted with a couple of complement­ary varieties for reliable pollinatio­n and an earlier harvest.

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