Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Make sure your efforts bear fruit...

Get ahead now before things mature with these extra colourful seasonal suggestion­s

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Let’s inject a riot of colour into our plots by using summer bedding. Although there is plenty flowering at the moment, with peonies, iris and roses at their peak, gardens can start to flag a bit as the summer goes on. If you plant out summer bedding plants now, they will lift your spirits and bring flamboyanc­e and perkiness to your garden in July, August and September.

In fact, many of these plants, if looked after well, will keep flowering until first frosts when they can then be discarded. Their disposable nature allows you to experiment with your planting, giving you freedom to change your colour scheme year on year.

They will dry out easily in their trays so the trick is to have your pots, containers or the ground ready prepared so they can go straight in.

Like all plants, they will perform better in well-prepared soil – dig out stones, weeds and add a loam-based John Innes compost if your soil is poor. Water the plug or small plants before and after planting, and maintain this regularly.

These plants are all about blossoms, so feed often with a liquid food high in potash – for example, tomato feed – to encourage flower production.

Avoid high-nitrogen feeds as these will encourage leafy growth at the expense of flowers.

Here are my top five bedding plants for this season:

NICOTIANA SYLVESTRIS (FLOWERING TOBACCO)

Don’t be fooled by neat trays of bedding available at the moment, these South American beauties will grow as tall as 5ft!

They’ll do well in moist soils and are handy for filling areas with partial shade.

The flowers are long skinny tubes opening to white starry petals and emit the most delicious fragrance when dusk falls.

Plant in pots near the patio or your favourite night-time spot in the garden – perfect on a balcony for apartment dwellers.

There’s also a more compact version with lime-green flowers. ■ Keep fruit bushes wellwatere­d in dry spells to allow fruit to swell.

Plums, pears and apples can be thinned out now too. This happens naturally as well, but if you want bigger fruit, remove some of the smaller fruitlets.

■ Check brassicas (cabbages, broccoli, turnips, Brussels sprouts) for butterflie­s laying their eggs – often you will find them on the underside of leaves.

Remove these, as when hatched as caterpilla­rs they can completely exfoliate your plant.

■ ■ Pop a few nasturtium seeds in the ground or pots for a cascade of flowers in late summer.

■ Consider installing a water barrel to conserve rainfall. ■ ■ Earth up potatoes. New potatoes may be ready to harvest, depending on when planted.

 ??  ?? Cosmos
Cosmos
 ??  ?? Snap dragon (Antirrhinu­m majus)
Snap dragon (Antirrhinu­m majus)
 ??  ?? Continue succession­al sowing of salads, and sow cucumber, sweetcorn, squash, French, runner and broad beans outdoors.
Prune spring-flowering deciduous shrubs, such as kerria, philadelph­us, forsythia, ribes and weigela, as soon as they are finished...
Continue succession­al sowing of salads, and sow cucumber, sweetcorn, squash, French, runner and broad beans outdoors. Prune spring-flowering deciduous shrubs, such as kerria, philadelph­us, forsythia, ribes and weigela, as soon as they are finished...
 ??  ?? A pear tree
A pear tree
 ??  ?? Nicotiana sylvestris
Nicotiana sylvestris

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