Even rainy English summers need a hand
NATURE normally does a good job of making the wateringcan redundant, but despite the normal monsoons of the English summer, irrigation is still high on the agenda.
Beds and borders should usually get their fill from the heavens, but as the end of June and start of July showed, many container-grown plants still require watering – and feeding – to keep them looking their best.
The only way to find out if they need water is with the finger test – stick a digit into the compost in the pot; if the finger comes out clean, it’s definitely time to water; if it comes out dirty and damp, move on to the next container.
If any are waterlogged, lift them an inch or so off the ground (balance them on those expensive little terracotta ‘feet’ or just use a few bits of old slate) to let excess water drain away.
Correct feeding is another matter altogether. Adding soluble plant food into the watering can every 10 days or so is just right to encourage strong flowering and fruiting.
Alternatively, incorporate slowrelease fertiliser granules into the compost and forget about any further feeding for several months to come.
But that doesn’t mean you sit down and drink tea for the next few weeks – now comes the job of deadheading. If you leave the old blooms untouched, they will set seed; if you remove them, you’ll be encouraging the plants to produce another flush of flowers.
And while you’re at it, keep an eye on flowering pot plants such as fuchsias, cyclamen, begonias and primulas which are susceptible to damage by black vine weevil. The plants lose vigour and perform poorly.
If you suspect these pests have invaded your pot plants, inspect the root systems for white horseshoe-shaped grubs with brown heads. If they are there, drench the compost of affected plants with a systemic insecticide.
Greenfly and blackfly are much more easily spotted and can be controlled with any one of several proprietary insecticides which can be used to treat all decorative flowering plants.