Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In the garden

- JANET CARSON Special to the Democrat-Gazette/ RON WOLFE

Q I want to plant a dwarf gardenia bush. It would face morning sun. Should I wait until spring or plant now? Do you know of a variety that is more winter hardy? A

Since none of us can predict what type of winter we are going to have, my preference would be to wait until spring to plant a gardenia outside. Mild winters pose no threat, but cold winters can damage establishe­d gardenia plants from central Arkansas northward, and newly planted ones are at more risk. There are many great varieties of gardenias, including singleand double-blooming types, and some are more cold tolerant than others. “Radicans” is a dwarf with double blooms that trails more than it grows upright;

“Daisy” is a single-flowered form, but it produces all of its blooms all at once and is done. Two larger but quite cold-tolerant varieties are “Jubilation” and “Frost Proof.” Q

I have a dwarf lemon tree and want to move it into the house. What should I treat it with so it doesn’t bring in unwanted insects? I also am going to leave it in the house year-round. Will I have any lemons without pollinatio­n? It will receive afternoon sun. A

As you begin to move plants indoors, give pot and plant a good cleaning, plus close inspection. You can spray with an insecticid­al soap to remove aphids and other soft-bodied insects. Even drenching the soil with some of the insecticid­al soap can help.

Unless you have a greenhouse window or sunroom in your house, you may need to provide supplement­al light for your lemon if you want fruit. Lemons need 6-8 hours of bright sunlight a day to bloom. While they would prefer a move outdoors for the summer, if you leave them inside year-round, once you see blooms, get a small paintbrush and lightly move pollen from flower to flower. Hopefully you will see some fruit. Q My cut-leaf Japanese maple is well establishe­d in a deep planter now for five years.

It is east-facing and gets full sun until 2 p.m. It gets water regularly and Osmocote twice a year. Lately I have been seeing more and more of what looks like burning at the tips of the leaves and beyond. Can you tell me what it is and if I have cause for worry? A

The tip burning can be a bit of sunburn. I consider most Japanese maple varieties as understory trees as they do best with morning sun or filtered sun. Getting sun until 2 p.m. is exposing it to bright light. There are several leaf-spot ailments that can affect Japanese maples, and our recent

storms could have added to the damage. I would not start any spray program this late in the season. Rake up the leaves as they fall and monitor the tree next spring as it leafs out. Q I potted a rose of Sharon last year and it wintered over in the garage. I have only been here a little over a year and have not been able to get it into the ground. It came back just fine and is still in a pot outside. It has bloomed a little. Last month it had many buds on it but they are not opening up, just drying and falling off. The foliage looks good and no bugs that I can see. A

I wonder how large the container is. Rose of Sharon or althea would be much happier in the ground than in a pot. It is one of those plants that often thrive on neglect once planted. In a container, it will require much more water and thus more fertilizer, as all nutrition leaches out. If you can find a spot with full sun to partial shade, plant it in the ground and wait for next year. Many altheas are still blooming beautifull­y right now.

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