Campbeltown Courier

Gardening in March: sow those seeds

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For most of us, March is the start of the gardening year. It’s a month of digging and sowing and a time to get busy preparing seed beds, cutting back winter shrubs and generally tidying up around the garden.

In addition to getting vegetable and flower seeds started in the greenhouse or undercover, you can also sow hardy seeds outside into their final positions – depending on where you live in the UK.

Your garden’s climatic conditions will affect when you sow and plant out. In the south, that’s going to be March but, the further north you live, it will be early or even late April, dependent on frost.

So, thrifty tip for the month is – make seed sowing your garden mantra this year. Seeds are cheap, or free if you harvest your own, and once you have mastered seed-sowing, you can create a glorious floral or veg haven for almost nothing.

A packet containing about 100 seeds can cost a fraction of the price of one plant and will keep you going for a couple of years as it is unlikely you will use them all in one go.

Many seeds can be sowed straight into the ground, either in rows or simply scattered, but some prefer to start off life in seed trays under cover and then be planted out once seedlings are robust enough for the outdoor environmen­t.

You can recycle plastic food trays for growing seeds inside or in a greenhouse – just make a few holes in the bottom for drainage. Always read the seed packet for sowing instructio­ns and if you can get hold of some seed compost that can make a difference to your success rate. And don’t forget to label.

If sowing in rows straight into the ground, break up large clods of soil, remove stones and rake over them using a taught string line as a guide make a shallow trench.

Sprinkle seeds carefully and evenly along the row so that they fall to the bottom of the trench. Cover seeds with a layer of soil then gently water using a watering can with sprinkler head. Sow seeds to the depth recommende­d on the packet.

Annuals are prime candidates for scatter sowing, and you can easily fill a bare border or space with a riot of colour in just a couple of months. From mid-spring to early summer, simply scatter your flower seeds directly onto finely raked garden soil in a sunny spot, rake them in and water well but gently.

No nonsense easy annuals to grow from seed include nasturtium­s, sweet peas, cosmos, nigella, marigolds, california­n poppies and cornflower­s.

Spring flowers such as daffodils will come to the end of their flowering period relatively soon. Advice from the Royal Horticultu­ral Society (RHS) is that March is a time to think about deadheadin­g daffodils as a little care now will keep bulbs healthy.

Let the leaves yellow and wither naturally, so they return nutrients to the bulb. If the weather turns dry, they will benefit from watering and, if they are growing in pots, feed weekly with a potassium-rich fertiliser such as tomato feed.

Favourite varieties include narcissus “February gold” that has early bright-yellow flowers in February; narcissus “fragrant rose” with a scented, soft pink daffodil flower that appears in April; and narcissus “tete-a-tete”, the much-loved miniature with bright yellow trumpet flowers that show in March and April.

 ?? ?? Narcissus ‘fragrant rose’ has a scented, soft pink daffodil flower that appears in April.
Narcissus ‘fragrant rose’ has a scented, soft pink daffodil flower that appears in April.

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