Porterville Recorder

Garden Tips for July 2019

-

PLANTING: If you can, wait until cooler weather to add new plants. The exceptions are heat-loving edible annuals, and some water-and-heat-loving small perennials. I have planted plenty of plants in the summer, but you must have your irrigation system ready to go and monitor soil moisture reliably for at least two weeks. It's more work, takes more dedicated time, and the risk of losing the plants is greater. It's not for the faint of heart or the time-challenged! Plant only in the early the morning or, even better, at dusk, and don't let the root ball dry out while transplant­ing. Saturate the soil and mulch around the plant. Hose the plant off with a light mist. Do not use any fertilizer either in the planting hole or around the base of the plant. You may need to construct temporary shade structures, since heat waves will be inevitable this month. When the nighttime temperatur­es remain in the 70's degrees Fahrenheit, plants cannot cool themselves off well. Breezy hot days are very stressful to plants, so don't plant at all if wind is forecast in the next week.

Expect some wilting, yellowing and dropping leaves. The plant should recover within two weeks. The soil should remain moist but not completely waterlogge­d, since roots do need some oxygen to grow. Avoid planting species that are susceptibl­e to root and crown rots. This includes many lowwater, woody shrubs and perennials like Ceanothus, manzanita, woody sages, lavender, rosemary, buckwheat, cactus and some succulents, flannel bush, desert mallow, Hesperaloe, and coffeeberr­y. You can plant California fuchsia and goldenrod for some late summer and fall color, since they like heat and tolerate over watering in warm soils. You can also plant fall-flowering crocus, Lycoris and Sternbergi­a right through summer.

Edibles to plant in July include tomatoes, basil, peppers, and artichoke from welldevelo­ped seedlings, and from seed: corn, winter and summer squash, radish, peas, bulb and green onion, and fall-harvested vegetables like broccoli, cauliflowe­r, chard, kale, and cabbage.

MAINTAININ­G: Monitoring watering is the biggest maintenanc­e job in July. Because of our late-season precipitat­ion, many plants have put on extra growth and flowers. That extra first-season vegetation needs to stay hydrated. Establishe­d ornamental trees and shrubs should be deep watered, but on a less-frequent schedule than smaller perennials and new transplant­s. The edible garden, including fruit trees, should receive a consistent supply of water sufficient to replace water lost through transpirat­ion. That doesn't necessaril­y mean the ground should be wet all

the time. Let the first inch or more of soil dry out between watering. If a heatwave is predicted, water a day or two in advance, and then not again until the soil dries out a little. Roots need oxygen as well as water and nutrients, so water-logged soil leads to stressed plants. Monitor and test your irrigation system at least once during summer, especially if you will be gone more than a few days. You don't have to overwater your garden plants in summer. The goal is to keep them alive and healthy, but winter and springbloo­ming plants should produce seed in the summer but not grow much, if any, foliage. Many plants, especially California-native and other Mediterran­eanclimate species, go dormant or partially dormant during summer. Learn about your plants so you won't accidental­ly kill them by over watering a plant that displays dormancy by showing a lot of brown foliage. Plants in this category include bush lupine, monkey-flower, bush anemone, many woody sages, some lavender species, gum-plant, blue-eyed grass and native iris.

Avoid over watering lawns. If your lawn is water soaked, disease and pest insects are almost guaranteed in valley-floor soils. Water does not cool the grass, it only replaces what the plant transpires during the day. Plants don't sweat the way mammals do. Use a moisture monitor or poke your fingers down into the crown of your lawn to see if it's lacking moisture. Fescue lawns can suffer heat stress, sunburn, and warm-season diseases, and all of them may look like you need to water more.

Continue dead-heading roses and daylilies.

Remove spent flower heads and the entire flowering stem from hydrangea, leaving only a few buds per stem for next year. You can begin to divide bearded iris in July or wait another month if they still look lush and green. If you decide to divide: lift the entire clump. Use a sharp knife to separate the rhizomes. Remove and discard the old rhizomes and only replant the younger smaller rhizomes that grow off of the older stems. Trim leaves to about six inches. Set exposed sections in the sun to dry for a few days to callus over any cut sections. Plant the rhizomes (that big gnarly root-like mass) just below the soil surface, water well and mulch. Prune spent berry canes to the ground after harvesting. Trellis new canes as they emerge. Pinch new growth on chrysanthe­mums. Lightly prune bougainvil­lea to promote more flowers. Major pruning should wait until the weather cools, unless it's for safety. You can lightly prune in the cool morning or evening hours, but not if a heat wave is predicted in the next few days. Don't fertilize anything during July with high-nitrogen products, including lawns. Fertilizin­g itself is stressful to plants. July is a good month to let the garden rest. Weeds are a year-round challenge, so keep up with those heat-loving weeds. Monitor and control rodents and insect pests. You don't have to eliminate pests, just control their population­s. Hose off plants as a first treatment. Insecticid­al soap sprayed in the evening is the second treatment. We are all busy and would rather do a one-time-and-done style of pest management, but gardening is like caring for other living beings: steady observatio­n and small correction­s are the key to a garden full of beneficial wildlife, happy plants and happy humans.

CONSERVING: Healthy plants can tolerate quite a bit of damage. Chewed leaves may be from grasshoppe­rs, but if you find caterpilla­rs, try to identify them before removing or reaching for the chemicals. Try to tolerate damage from native species in order to support native moths and butterflie­s. Tobacco or tomato horned worms and other exotic pest larvae are easy to handpick. You can use Bacillus thuringien­sis (BT) if pest caterpilla­r population­s are out of control, and then return to monitoring and handpickin­g as needed. Don't use pesticides as a preventati­ve, especially broad-spectrum poisons. Pesticides are a remedy to a specific problem you have identified. Native bees and wasps are active in the summer months. Most of these tiny insects are hardly noticed because European honeybees are also active. Leave flowering ("bolting") plants like radish, onion and carrots for beneficial insects, and if you can, leave a little bare dirt here and there for ground-nesting solitary bees.

Summer months are also good for planning. Spend some time in the shade of the garden and start making your notes on changes you want to do when the weather cools. Who knows? Maybe this will be a short summer. We can dream.

Happy Gardening!

The UCCE Master Gardeners will be available to answer your gardening questions at the following venues in July:

Visalia Farmers' Market – Every Saturday morning (8-11 am), Visalia Sears parking lot on Mooney. Hanford "Thursday Night Marketplac­e" – every second Thursday (5:30 – 9:00 pm) through October Portervill­e Farmers' Market @ Sierra View Hospital – every Thursday (8-11:30 am) through June 27. Masters Gardeners also maintain the Tulare County Courthouse Roses and the Ralph Moore Memorial Garden on the 3rd Wed. (approx. 8-10 am) of each month and are available for questions.

For answers to all your home gardening questions, call the Master Gardeners in Tulare County at (559) 684-3325, Tuesdays and Thursdays between 9:30 and 11:30 am; or Kings County at (559) 8522736, Thursday Only, 9:30-11:30 a.m; or visit our website to search past articles, find links to UC gardening informatio­n, or to email us with your questions: http://ucanr.edu/sites/Uc_master_gardeners/

Visit us on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/mgtulareki­ngs14/

 ??  ?? Peyton Ellas UCCE Master Gardener
Peyton Ellas UCCE Master Gardener

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States