Members Gardening Tips


CAYNHAM AND DISTRICT GARDENING SOCIETY GARDENING HINTS AND TIPS

How to deter cats

-  Place a plastic snake in amongst your plants or on your seed bed.  Cats do not like snakes!

 -  Save used tea bags and dry them.  Add a few drops of Citronella oil or eucalyptus oil to each one and then spread them around the areas in your garden frequented by cats.  Re-new after heavy rain.

 -  Plant ‘Coleus Canina aka Scaredy Cat’ where cats frequent

 -  Buy a battery operated Cat watch ultrasonic deterrent.  This detects any cat movement or body heat and emits an ultrasonic noise to repel cats from the area. It can help to train cats away from your garden and reduce their presence.  We cannot hear the noise.

 -  Sprinkle Curry powder or chilli pepper powder where they frequent.

Chris King

-        Brush your hands gently over young seedlings each day – it helps them grow stronger and thicker.

(Country Living Magazine)

-        If mulching newly planted perennials, up-end their pots as temporary covers to avoid smothering them.
 (Country Living Magazine)

 

-        Take care when you dismantle a compost heap, especially in winter as they may contain a sleeping hedgehog.

 

Cath Corfield

-        Coffee grounds are a good slug barrier as they are abrasive and acidic, plus the caffeine in the coffee dries up the slimy slugs.  It is also good for the soil, containing 1.45% nitrogen as well as magnesium, calcium and potassium.  It makes a good mulch.

 
Gill Tanner

-        When a plant in a pot has got over dry immerse the plant in its pot in a bucket of water and hold it below the water surface until bubbles have stopped coming out of it - that mean the water has replaced all of the air in the compost and then you can lift the plant out of the water and leave it to stand to drain knowing that it has been watered fully.

Elizabeth Hatchell
 
1.      If designing or re-designing a garden, start with the views from the house.  You’ll spend far more time looking out at the garden than actually in it.  A pleasant view every time you glance out of the window will be very satisfying whereas the alternative will annoy you every time.

 2.      Money spent on structural plants – trees and shrubs – will be far more cost-effective than odd single plant purchases unless you are going to turn each pot of plant into at least three more plants.  Single plants can look very isolated whereas a group of three looks meant.

3.      Every plant that flowers between September and March is worth a lot more than those that flower in the summer months when there is so much colour and so many different textures available.  Evergreen climbers and shrubs which form a background in the summer months are the highlights in the winter, providing structure and form – and often flowers as well.  Even old-fashioned common plants such as viburnum tinus is currently covered in flowers, providing nectar and pollen for insects – and something to cut for the house.

4.      One tree that provides two or more seasons of interest is worth a lot more than a single interest tree.  For example hamamalis mollis Arnold Promise is of little value during the summer months but in late September its leaves are stunning colours from red to orange, yellow and green, all at the same time.  When the leaves drop it is dormant, only to burst into brilliant yellow flowers that can last 5-6 weeks from January to March. Incidentally, my favourite tree.

Jean Faulkner

 
Propagation

·        To increase bedding plants, when pinching out growing tips to encourage bushiness, let them get a bit longer than normal & use them as cuttings. Just insert into compost. Very successful with marigolds, cosmos, dahlias, but try with anything – most annuals just want to root & grow in spring.

 

·        To increase hardy cyclamen from seed is very easy. Fresh seed is best but soak it or older seed in water for 24 hours to help break dormancy. Sow thinly in well drained compost – add sharp grit or perlite – and cover with a layer of fairly fine grit – ‘chick grit’ is very good. Keep pots indoors until spring. Germination will take anything from a few weeks to several months. Pot the seedlings on when the foliage dies back in their 2nd year, when they will have developed a small corm. The grit helps to discourage the moss & liverwort that would otherwise develop over that time.

If for some reason seed fails to germinate, usually older seed, be patient. Seed may take 2-3 years to germinate.

Plants should flower in their 3rd year.

 

·        Other ‘bulbs’ which flower best from fresh seed, that is as soon as collected, include snowdrops (almost essential), irises, crocus, erythroniums (common name Dog’s Tooth Violet – but not the viola that is also called that), fritillaries, crocus, some alliums.

 

·        Hellebores also need to be sown from fresh seed.

 

·        If you tend to forget to water seed pots or trays try self-watering trays. These are available commercially but tend to be expensive. To make your own, take a gravel tray of any size, cut a sheet of something rigid & impervious to water so that it fits inside the tray. Support the sheet on something like very small pots, small blocks of wood or anything that doesn’t take up much room, & preferably doesn’t float, so that it is level with or just above the top of the tray. Cover the sheet with capillary matting so that an end overhangs to the bottom of the tray and fill the tray with water. You will need to remember to fill the tray from time to time!

 
Vegetables – what varieties should I sow?

 

It can be useful to sow at least 2 different varieties of things:

·        They will probably have different tolerances to weather & growing conditions & as we know these are now totally unpredictable. When going through the seed catalogues look for things like ‘tolerates dry conditions’ or ‘tolerates adverse weather’.

 

·        As our growing season is a bit later that the south’s, early cropping varieties are useful. If the weather’s been unkind & things have been held back they will also have a chance of producing before the end of the season.

 

·        Look for varieties with different harvest times to extend crop availability.

 

·        Flavour is clearly important, but can you believe what you read in the seed catalogues? None of them are going to admit to poor flavour & it tends to be a personal thing anyway. Flavour will also depend on your growing conditions. So growing more than one variety allows you to begin to select the ones you like & that like you.

  

Julie Alviti

-        Weed and mulch all borders in spring.  This is the best tip I can give as it saves so much work later on.  Take out all perennial weeds and cover all borders in a thick layer of sterile mulch.

 

-        Cleaning up used plant labels.  This is 2 tips in one.  Cover the bottom of a dirty and stained vase with bleach and then fill to the top with water.  Put a handful of plant labels in the solution and leave overnight.  Pour away the solution and wash out the vase and swill the labels.  Everything will be clean.  Always take care when using bleach.

 

-        Killing individual ground elder and bindweed.  Wear protective gloves whilst doing this.  Paint the ground elder with the gel.  Place a cane by the base of the bindweed and let it grow up the cane.  Paint it with the roundup gel.

 

-        Don’t be afraid to plant annuals.  Annuals such as Cosmos, Zinnia, Cerinthe, Salvia Blue and pink Clary, and Snap Dragons are lovely additions to the garden and flower until the frosts.  They are good for filling gaps and very easy to grow.

 

-        Showa gardening gloves.  These gardening gloves are wonderful.  They allow your hands to breath and they are thin enough for you to plant and do other gardening tasks.  You can get a very thin pair for pricking out, a standard pair for everyday gardening, a thermal pair for the winter and a pair for pruning roses.  There are also many other types.  Buy from gardening shows, Amazon or their website www.showagloves.com.

 

Tesco Club Card Boost

If you have Tesco Club card points go online and use Club Card Boost

There are lots of garden related offers.

Thompson and Morgan give 3 times the value of your points.  In one transaction when ordering from Thompson and Morgan online you can use £15.00 worth of points for £45.00 worth of shopping.  This does not include postage.

 
12 months Gardeners World magazine substription can be bought for £15.50 worth of club card points.  There are also other gardening publications.

 
RHS Membership for one year can be bought for £18.00 worth of club card points.

 Linda Drew

Interlocking plastic garden tiles

These are cheap to buy and wonderful for putting on top of wet soil to wheel your barrow across or stand on to plant between rows.

Other tips

1.      Always wash seed trays to avoid ‘damping off’ -  spray with bleach and leave for half an hour and then wash off with a stiff brush.

 

2.      A ball left in a pond before an overnight freeze will help to stop the pond from completely freezing over.  If the ball is removed in the morning it leaves and air hole for fish and a water hole for other animals.

 

3.      To ripen green tomatoes place a ripe banana with them.  The skins give off ethylene which will ripen the tomatoes.

 

4.      Support heavily loaded fruit tree branches with an old clothes line prop.  This reduces the risk of the weight of fruit tearing the branch off the tree.

 

5.      Take regular photographs of your garden to form a record of your gardens development over the years.

 

-        Keep a garden journal.  It is so useful to look back on for when you planted your seeds or where you planted a certain plant.

 

-        When visiting other gardens take a notebook to jot down names of plants that you would like to have in your own garden.
 
-        Old broken terracotta pots can be used to make lovely planters if planted up with houseleeks.

 
-        Clean tools such as spades in a bucket of oily sand.  This will clean off the dirt and oil the spade at the same time.

 
-        It always easier to pull weeds from wet soil.  If it is dry soak the area you would like to weed with a hosepipe an hour before you weed. 

 

 

 

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