Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Fall frost is no excuse to forget your garden

TAKE STOCK IN HOW YOUR FLOWER BEDS BEHAVED, AND GET READY FOR THE NEXT GROWING SEASON

- By Dean Fosdick THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dean Fosdick can be reached at deanfosdic­k@netscape.net

The outdoor growing season is over, and it’s time to pause and take stock. Review those gardening impression­s that delighted you as well as those that disappoint­ed. Apply what one veteran planter calls “creative staring” to improve the look of your landscape and the rewards of your harvest.

Begin your evaluation with the soil because it’s the key to all plant growth, says Leonard Perry, an emeritus professor of horticultu­re with University of Vermont Extension. He recommends testing soil samples every couple of years.

“The type of soil likely hasn’t changed, but the fertility may have,” Perry says in a fact sheet.

One key to successful gardening is keeping a personal diary for recording what took place around the property during the course of the year, said Pamela Hubbard, a master gardener and writer for Penn State ExtensionM­onroe County.

“I make a list of new goals toward the end of each garden season while it’s still fresh in my mind,” Hubbard says. “I carry it with me around the yard while I determine what worked and what didn’t.”

There are many different types of garden journals. Some are homemade and resemble family scrapbooks, while commercial versions at bookstores incorporat­e such things as plastic sleeves and worksheets. Computers, laptops and phone cameras also make evaluation easier.

“Record the dates of each year’s seasonal landmarks: weather patterns, when the first spring flower bloomed, arrival of butterflie­s and hummingbir­ds, the first and last frost,” Hubbard says. “Also, note when pest problems appeared and what you did about them.”

Other questions to ask yourself include possible budget changes, drainage system improvemen­ts, installing more efficient irrigation networks, and whether climate change is impacting the things you grow.

Gardening is unusual in that it offers so many opportunit­ies for improvemen­t. Be prepared to uproot, relocate, prune, divide, rotate or simply trade away what no longer satisfies or provides interest. Plants and people change substantia­lly over time.

Tree limbs may have begun brushing up against dwellings. Shrubs might have grown so high they’re blocking the sun from flower gardens. Perhaps you want more screening or privacy in your yard and less lawn to mow. Plant predators like deer may have become troublesom­e enough to require barriers.

“I just lost a major shade tree and now I have to decide what to do with that area,” Hubbard says. “I may need to exchange all my shadetoler­ant plants for some needing full sun.”

Maybe you have a busier job schedule or there’s a new baby in the house or you simply want to cut back on the workload as you age.

“I’ve replaced quite a few flowers with those that require less effort,” Hubbard says. “I only grow a small kitchen garden now. We know what we like to eat and we stick with that.”

Gardening, says Hubbard, is “never static. People put their garden in and think: ‘That’s it. I’m done.’ But you’re never ever done.”

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 ?? Dean Fosdick / Associated Press ?? Although some gardens have already frosted over, keep your plants alive in your mind, evaluating what delighted and what disappoint­ed over the last growing season. Then make the necessary changes for your 2020 planting program.
Dean Fosdick / Associated Press Although some gardens have already frosted over, keep your plants alive in your mind, evaluating what delighted and what disappoint­ed over the last growing season. Then make the necessary changes for your 2020 planting program.

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