The rain provides for good planting
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The Garden Fanatic
“Nowadays, people know the price of everything and the value of
nothing.”
-- OSCAR WILDE
“A bargain is in its very essence a hostile transaction ... .”
-- LORD BYRON
Although I freely dispense advice weekly in this column, I also
have the pleasure to visit gardens and dispense advice (although not
for free!). As a businessman, I hope that gardeners will support
local nurseries. As a pragmatist, I am aware that many shoppers are
influenced by cost and believe that bigger will offer a better price.
I don’t believe that is necessarily true.
During a visit with a new client, I was asked to design a garden
using the plant material purchased at a new warehouse outlet. The
plants were attractive and priced competitively -- the major
influences in the purchase. There was only one problem: Few of the
plants were appropriate for use in Laguna.
The showers of this past week appear to signal that we are past
the relatively dry period and returning to a more normal period of
rainy weather. This is the prime time to plant bare root roses. Moist
soil and our warm winters will have those roses blooming by early
March. Your favorite nursery is offering their largest selection and
best values of the year.
We have until the end of February to plant bare roots and prune
our existing roses. Generally, I don’t recommend removing more than
one-third of a rose. And I suggest that you just strip the leaves off
existing climbing roses. Otherwise, you will be pruning this season’s
flowers.
Pruning ... seal cuts when they are larger than 1/2-inch in
diameter on roses and other deciduous plants. Pruning paint is a
convenient way to keep diseases from entering pruning cuts (think of
it as a bandage). Dormant sprays should be applied after pruning,
prior to the appearance of new leaves.
This is also a great time to plant lawns, either to fix a small
spot or an entire plot (believe the Marathon grass commercial, it’s
true). It is important to prepare the soil properly first, add
redwood compost, gypsite and preplant fertilizer. Cool season grasses
like Marathon, other tall fescues and bluegrass will benefit from
fertilization during the winter.
Pest alert ... Catharine tells me that aphids are already
appearing on her new, red foliage of roses because of the
unseasonably warm weather. Use water and Ultra Fine Oil to wash them
off. Snails and slugs are active particularly after a rain shower.
That’s It snail granules will provide excellent control without
endangering your pets.
Winter color ... this is my favorite time for color. I love
pansies, snapdragons, stock, the primroses and particularly Iceland
poppies. Once again, prepare the soil properly to ensure success. Try
cocoa mulch to keep snails and the neighbor’s cats off your flowers.
As a bonus, it smells just like chocolate malt!
See you next time.
* STEVE KAWARATANI is the owner of Landscapes by Laguna Nursery,
1540 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
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