Summer is definitely here! I hope that your vegetable and flower gardens have survived the hot windy weather. Listed below are recommendations for July. It is time to be thinking about your fall gardens. Don’t forget we have a lot of helpful fact sheets. Happy Summer and Happy Gardening!
Vegetable Garden
• Make fall vegetable garden plantings in late July. Fact Sheet We have fact sheets that gives planting recommendations.
Lawn
• Brown patch disease of cool-season grasses can be a problem.
• Meet water requirements of turfgrasses. Fertilization of warm-season grasses can continue if water is present for growth.
• Vegetative establishment of warm-season grasses should be completed by the end of July to ensure the least risk of winter kill. Mowing heights for coolseason turf grasses should be at 3 inches during hot, dry summer months. Gradually raise mowing height of bermudagrass lawns from 1½ to 2 inches.
• Sharpen or replace mower blades as needed. Shredded leaf blades are an invitation to disease and allow more stress on the grass.
Tree and Shrub
• Control bermudagrass around trees and shrubs with products containing sethoxydim, fusilade or glyphosate herbicides. Follow directions closely to avoid harming desirable plants.
Fruits
• Continue insect combat and control in the orchard, garden, and landscape.
• Check pesticide labels for “stop” spraying recommendations prior to harvest.
• Harvest fruit from the orchard early in the morning and refrigerate as soon as possible.
Flowers
• Divide and replant crowded Hybrid iris (Bearded Iris) after flowering until August.
General Landscape
• Water plants deeply and early in the morning. Most plants need approximately 1 to 2½ inches of water per week.
• Providing birdbaths, shelter and food will help turn your landscape into a backyard wildlife habitat.
• Insect identification is important, so you don’t get rid of the “Good Guys.”
• The hotter and drier it gets, the larger the spider mite populations!
• Expect some leaf fall, a normal reaction to drought. Water young plantings well.