Garden Talk: Planning Now for a Great Growing Season Next Year

Air Date:
Heard On The Larry Meiller Show

On this edition of Garden Talk, Larry Meiller learns six steps to take this fall to create a beautiful landscape next season. Plus, a great new guide for Wisconsin and Minnesota gardeners.

Featured in this Show

  • Six Steps To Take This Fall For A Beautiful Landscape Next Season

    Gardening can be such a fun, and relaxing activity. But when the season starts winding down, it can be a little harder to get motivated to do garden clean-up and other fall chores.

    Melinda Myers is a Milwaukee-based garden expert and the author of more than 20 books, including the brand-new “Minnesota and Wisconsin Getting Started Garden Guide.” Myers said it pays to fight that impulse to take it easy right now.

    “A little bit of effort now can really pay off big time,” she said, “not only to end the season with beauty, but to get a jump start on next year. Because, as we all know, spring can come early, or like last year, very late. And there can be very little time to get ready for the season.”

    Here is detailed information that Myers provided to take this fall to create a beautiful landscape next season:

    Cut the grass, recycle fall leaves, and improve the soil with a pass of the lawn mower. Shred leaves and leave them on the lawn as you mow this fall. As long as you can see the grass through the leaf pieces, the lawn will be fine. As the leaves break down they add organic matter to the soil, improving drainage in clay soil and water holding ability in sandy soils.

    Or, as an alternative, use excess leaves as a soil mulch. Shred the leaves with your mower and spread a layer over the soil to conserve moisture and insulate the roots of perennials. Fall mulching gives you a jump on next spring’s landscape chores.

    Improve your lawn’s health by fertilizing this fall with a low nitrogen slow release fertilizer, like Milorganite. You’ll reduce the risk of disease problems and with slower weed growth in fall, your lawn, not the weeds, will benefit from the nutrients. Fall fertilization also helps lawns recover from the stresses of summer by encouraging deep roots and denser growth that can better compete with weeds and tolerate disease and insects.

    Wisconsin gardeners can follow the holiday schedule and fertilize Labor Day and Halloween.

    Do a bit of planting. Cool season annuals brighten up the fall garden. Consider adding cold hardy pansies. They provide color in the fall garden, survive most winters, and are back blooming in the spring just as the snow melts.

    Fall is also a good time to plant perennials, trees and shrubs. The soil is warm and the air cooler, so the plants are less stressed and establish more quickly. Select plants suited to the growing conditions and be sure to give them plenty of room to reach their mature size.

    Plant daffodils, tulips, hyacinths and other bulbs in fall for extra color next spring. Set the bulbs at a depth of two to three times their height deep. Then cover them with soil and sprinkle on a low nitrogen slow release fertilizer. This type of fertilizer promotes rooting without stimulating fall growth subject to winter kill.

    Base your bulb planting time on the weather not the calendar. Start planting after the night-time temperatures hover between 40 and 50 degrees. Be patient, waiting until the soil cools reduces the risk of early sprouting that often occurs during a warm fall.

    Leave healthy perennials stand for winter. This increases hardiness and adds beauty to the winter landscape with their seed heads, dried foliage and the birds they attract. Plus, it will delay cleanup until spring when gardeners are anxious to get outdoors and start gardening.

    However, be sure to remove any diseased or insect-infested plants to reduce the source of pest problems in next year’s garden.

    Start composting or add shredded leaves and other plant debris to an existing compost pile. Combine fall leaves with other plant waste, a bit of soil or compost, and sprinkle with fertilizer to create compost. Recycling yard waste saves time bagging, hauling and disposing of green debris. You also reduce or eliminate the need to buy soil amendments to improve your existing garden soil.

Episode Credits

  • Larry Meiller Host
  • Judith Siers-Poisson Producer
  • Melinda Myers Guest

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