First week of August:
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Now is the ideal time to take pictures and plan
for next year’s vegetable and flower gardens.
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Order your spring flowering bulbs now.
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Check your garden plants, shrubs, flowers and
trees for diseases and insect pests.
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Begin planning and planting your fall
vegetables, such as lettuce, radishes, kale, spinach, carrots, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower and peas.
Mid-August:
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Apply a second treatment of lawn insecticide for
grub control or use milky spore dust, a bacteria that will attack more than 40
species of white grubs; this can be applied anytime.
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Collect materials for dried flower arrangements,
including weeds, flowers, marsh grasses and foliage.
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Prepare lawn or lawn areas that are going to be
seeded.
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Feed roses for the last time.
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Check azaleas if they are beginning to look pale
green to yellow. This is called chloritic. Check soil pH. These acid-loving
plants need to be fed.
Late August:
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Grapes that are ripening now perish easily so
keep refrigerated after harvesting.
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Inspect trunks and branches of dogwoods and
other trees for injured bark or fine dust pushed from burrows in trunks by
borers.
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Fertilize fall vegetable garden plants.
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Plant new lawns or reseed bare spots in old
lawns. This can be done until Sept. 30 in Delaware. If it’s dry, be sure to water
newly seeded lawns every day.
2 comments:
For 2012, when do you expect annual bluegrass to germinate? i want to put on a pre-emergent this fall to stop it.
Thx
Apply pre-emergent for annual bluegrass in late summer to early fall when temperatures drop to 70 degrees
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