The Press

Chill time for tulips

For a fine display of flowers in spring, you might need to pop your bulbs in the fridge for a while, says Mary Lovell-Smith.

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TULIPS

Tulips need a cold period of at least 10 weeks if they are to flower properly, so chilling the bulbs in the fridge to emulate their natural environmen­t is especially important if your district is unlikely to see at least five frosts a year.

• Put the bulbs in a paper bag and start chilling before the end of March. Do not store in the likes of a plastic bag or other unbreathab­le container else they may rot.

• Avoid storing fruit such as apples or bananas in the fridge at the same time as they release ethylene gas, which damages the developing flower bud in the bulb.

ORNAMENTAL­S

• Take hardwood cuttings of roses. Choose this season’s growth, selecting stems that are pencilthic­k and firm, between 15cm to 20cm long. Trim beneath a leaf bud and remove most of the leaves. Squash the lower few centimetre­s of stem to weaken the cambium layer just below the surface, which will encourage faster rooting. Dip into hormone-rooting powder and insert into deep pots of gritty compost so one-third of the stem is below the surface of the soil. Expect new shoots in spring but do not plant out for another year. • Cease deadheadin­g roses, thus letting them cease flowering which will lead to healthier and more floriferou­s plants next year. This will allow the developmen­t of hips, one of autumn’s glories.

EDIBLES

• Should you have had clubroot in your brassicas, dig in dolomite lime to lower the pH of your soil. Get winter crops in now to give them time to establish before the temperatur­es drop and plant growth slows.

• Sow green manure in any empty beds in the vegetable garden for digging in during late winter. As well as saving essential nutrients from being leached away over winter, the green crops will give back vital organic matter to the soil.

• By picking half-ripe tomatoes, the fruit left on the vines will mature more quickly. Store this picked fruit in a paper bag in a warm spot to aid ripening.

• Save seeds from your best tomatoes. Place on a tissue or paper towel on a sunny sill and, when dry, store in an airtight container till spring.

• Don’t forget to pick your autumn raspberrie­s, and if yours are only summer fruiting, make a note to buy other varieties once they come into the garden centres.

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