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April Activities

TREES AND SHRUBS:

  ~Now is a great time to mulch trees and shrubs if you haven’t already done so to give the roots protection from spring’s drying winds.  Pine needles, shredded bark, or other organic mulch material adds nutrients to the soil, making them preferable over lava rocks, etc.
  ~Spring blooming shrubs may be pruned now to keep at the desired size and will appreciate a nice meal after their blooming has ended.  A specially blended food for many shrubs, like azaleas, is available, or a 2:1:1 that will be sufficient on all of your trees and shrubs can be used.  
  ~Fertilize hibiscus (if they made it through the winter) and crepe myrtles now that the leaves are returning. 
 

PERENNIALS:

  ~Chrysanthemums may be divided at the end of this month. 
  ~If not done before, give bulbs a boost with bone meal after they bloom.  Sprinkle it freely around the bulb area and water in well but wait till fall to divide most.
  ~This is an excellent time to put in container grown perennials.  Remember to keep them watered well, though, since roots will be close to the surface.

ANNUALS/VEGETABLES:

  ~Set out herbs with vegetables this year as “companion plants” to control pests.
  ~Don’t be tempted to buy periwinkles just yet for summer color.  Unlike other annuals, periwinkles are susceptible to a soil borne fungal disease that thrives in rainy, cool conditions.  Either wait until mid-May or choose alternatives.
  ~ Seeded annual wildflowers sown in fall should be coming in waves now, depending on where you are.  Make a note on your calendar which ones have done best so that you can concentrate on those next year.

 GENERAL:

 ~Lawns can be fertilized after 2nd mowing with a slow release formula. Natural fertilizers do not give grass the quick fix (much like a sugar rush) of high nitrogen synthetic types, but instead improve soil and break down slowly so as not to burn lawns.  Microlife, Soil Food, and Earth Essentials are some of the commercial brands available.  Or just visit your local feed store for cottonseed (6-2-1 ratio) or alfalfa meal (3-1-2), inexpensive alternatives that also contain trace nutrients.  (Roses LOVE alfalfa meal and acid loving plants, such as azaleas and camellias thrive with a dose of cottonseed meal.  Just sprinkle some around the root ball and water in well.)
  ~Do NOT be tempted to “scalp” your lawn.  A late cold snap after a clean shave will damage tender roots.  Grass should never be cut more than 1/3 its height and let the clippings fall back onto your lawn from your mulching mower.  
  ~ Take a trip to a local arboretum or botanical garden to check out the great varieties of perennials growing there before making a trip to the nursery.  And don’t forget your pencil and paper because you will CERTAINLY want to take notes!

 

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Revised: January 25, 2009 .