Horowhenua Chronicle

Prepare now for summer colour

Labour Weekend is a key time for gardeners, writes

- Gareth Carter Gareth Carter

LABOUR WEEKEND HAS arrived and has always been the traditiona­l signal that the temperatur­es are now more stable and soft summer vegetables and flowers can be safely planted outside.

It is recognised as the time when soil temperatur­es have risen to germinate warm season vegetable seeds such as beans and sweetcorn.

Also, night temperatur­es should (hopefully) remain above 10C so the cucurbits (cucumbers, gherkins, pumpkins and many others) will actively grow.

A wet and cold spring this year has meant many have found that early plantings of soft summer vegetables have struggled to thrive.

Many plantings can more safely be made.

Seeds to sow and plantings that can now be made in Whanganui include beans, capsicum, chilli, cucumber, eggplants, kamokamo, melons, pumpkins, squash, sweet corn, tomatoes and zucchini.

Other vegetables that can be grown that are indifferen­t to cold snaps include beetroot, broccoli, carrots, celery, cabbage, cauliflowe­r, lettuce, peas, spring onions, radish, rhubarb and silverbeet.

If you haven’t yet planted any potatoes it is not too late. Potatoes planted now will be ready for harvest in late January or February.

If you have potatoes growing already then regular mounding needs to be maintained as this increases the length of stem covered on which the potato tubers form.

A side dressing of Tui Potato Food around the plants before they are mounded will be beneficial to growth and tuber developmen­t.

It is important to soon start spraying your potato crop with Yates Mavrik or Yates Success to protect against potato psyllid.

The potato psyllid can go undetected for a while but will later show up with plants showing stunting and yellowing of the growing tip.

The edges of the curled leaves often have a pink blush. The stem may have swollen nodes and show a browning of the vascular tissue. After a while, infected potatoes develop a scorched appearance and plants collapse prematurel­y.

Potato plants that are infected at an early stage end up with small underdevel­oped tubers.

The same psyllid affects all plants in the Solanaceae family which includes tomatoes and tamarillo.

Using the same mentioned spray treatment as for potatoes is effective.

The same warmer conditions that summer vegetables need are desired by summer flowering bedding plants too.

Impatiens and petunias are two of the most colourful and vibrant and plantings can now safely be made.

Now is the time to get your pots and hanging baskets planted for a stunning display for Christmas and summer.

Growing flowers in pots and hanging baskets is a wonderful way to garden and continues to gain wider popularity.

Today’s lifestyle, often with emphasis on the full use of limited space has led to the acceptance of any means by which plants can be used.

Almost any plant that will grow in a container can be grown in a hanging basket, creating new visual perspectiv­es even in a small courtyard, balcony or veranda.

Luxuriant mini-gardens can be developed without taking up valuable ground or floor space.

In cities around the world where people are living in confined spaces, hanging baskets and wall troughs are frequently used for growing vegetables, flowers and herbs.

Hanging baskets are often an answer to interior decorating problems.

For example a basket containing a large green hanging fern will soften harsh walls

GARDENING

or attractive­ly fill an empty corner.

Making a combinatio­n of a shrub or perennial along with flowering annuals can make for a long-lasting and eye-catching display.

For those looking for flowering annuals to add colour for pots and hanging baskets some suitable varieties include impatiens, marigold, nasturtium, ageratum, begonia, lobelia, nepeta (catnip), pelargoniu­m, petunia, portulaca and zinnia (dwarf).

Fuchsia is one of the finest flowering shrubs for a shady situation with stunning displays in summer and autumn. They have a magnificen­t affinity with hanging baskets and their branches will cascade over the side of the basket.

There is much to admire and many choices to plant to have a colourful spring garden.

Many rhododendr­ons too are looking amazing in full bloom. The intensity of a blooming rhododendr­on is impressive as the flower trusses hide the leaves and the stylish green structure becomes eclipsed by a mass of colour.

Azalea mollis are coming into bloom now, many hostas are now through the soil too.

Protect apple trees for codling moth now

Codling moth caterpilla­rs burrow into the fruit of apples and thus make holes in them.

They can also affect pears, quince, English walnuts and sometimes plums.

Once inside the fruit, the insect is relatively safe and will burrow towards the pip cavity and consume the seeds.

The insect “overwinter­s” as a fully fed caterpilla­r in a silken cocoon beneath pieces of loose bark on trees or in other sheltered positions it can reach.

In the late winter or early spring the overwinter­ed caterpilla­rs transform to pupae and the first moths generally appear during October and November and can occur into January and February.

The best method for control is an integrated pest management approach.

This involves using pheromone traps being hung in a tree.

Closely follow the instructio­ns given. Check weekly for population numbers caught in the trap and when larger numbers are recorded, a spray with Yates Success at this time is recommende­d, to provide a reasonably complete control against the pests.

is the general manager of Springvale Garden Centre

Constructi­on of the new WaitÃrere Beach Surf Life Saving Community Facility is planned to commence in November to replace the existing run down, no longer fit for purpose earthquake-prone building.

The new Community Facility will support surf life saving patrol and rescue operations and training. It will also provide the Levin-WaitÃrere Surf Life Saving Club and the community with a facility that can host up to 200 people.

Following an open tender process, local company Homestead Constructi­on was selected for the design and build project. Over the past year the club has been closely working with Homestead Constructi­on to design a fit for purpose building. Constructi­on will take place from November 2022 until November 2023.

Council has more recently submitted an applicatio­n to the Department of Internal A΍airs as part of the Three Waters Better O΍ Funding Package, to contribute an additional $400k towards upgrading public toilets and the wider public amenity surroundin­g the new Surf Life Saving Community Facility.

What the new building will have

• A patrol tower or watch room

• Training and beach education rooms for junior surf developmen­t and youth beach safety education which are open to school groups, the public and members of the club

• Kitchen and facilities to accommodat­e up to 200 people for community related events that closely align with surf life saving

• Changing rooms, toilets and showers

• First Aid room

• Storage facilities for the Surf Life Saving Club's rescue and training equipment

• Other features include a deck, patio, BBQ area, outside rinse showers and a washdown forecourt.

Why do we need a new building?

The building is run down, not fit for purpose and earthquake-prone.

The current building is 80 metres from the high tide mark, making it diɝcult for life saving patrols. The growing dunes have encased the lower floor in sand, creating a basement.

The building will support the following activities:

• Surf Lifeguard Patrols throughout the summer period

• Junior Surf Saturday (up to 80 juniors attending)

• Junior Surf holiday programme

• Sports training and events

• Lifeguard training and courses

• Surf Club social events such as prizegivin­gs (up to 200 people)

• Closely aligned activities to surf life saving.

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? In cities around the world where people are living in confined spaces, hanging baskets and wall troughs are frequently used.
Photos / Supplied In cities around the world where people are living in confined spaces, hanging baskets and wall troughs are frequently used.
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 ?? ?? Now is the time to get your pots and hanging baskets planted for a stunning display for Christmas and summer, writes Gareth Carter.
Now is the time to get your pots and hanging baskets planted for a stunning display for Christmas and summer, writes Gareth Carter.
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