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Eww, what’s on my plants? Gardener Jody Goodwin offers tips for dealing with …

Good morning! Well, you can certainly tell that summer is winding down. The weeds and wildflowers are in their glory along roadsides, blueberries are everywhere and the blackberries are ripe. Kids are thinking about backpacks and, if you are like me, you have more gardening to do than you want to think about. July was busy and my garden was neglected, hence all the work waiting. Oh well, the garden will go on.

August also tends to be a month when odd problems crop up in the garden. Mildew on garden phlox, blackspot on roses and a general malaise on everything that has bloomed and passed. The weather hasn’t helped. Drought, downpours and much higher humidity than usual have created issues, if my email is any indication.

High temperatures for long periods of time with just occasional thunderstorms do not make for a happy garden. And watering just doesn’t have the same effect as a good drenching rain. I also know that many of you water with overhead sprinklers. When your flowers are subjected to uneven water levels and high temperatures, this weakens them. Add in humidity, plus the fact your plant leaves are wet from sprinklers, and you have a perfect storm for fungal diseases.

Perennials in Maine, thankfully, are usually pretty healthy and don’t develop many of the plant diseases found in other parts of the country. Usually good air circulation in the garden, steady rainfall and our cool nights contribute to an overall healthy garden. But this summer’s drought and humidity have heightened  fungal problems.

August is when garden phlox is in its glory — and it is gorgeous. Unfortunately, it is also prone to powdery mildew, a fungal infestation. Roses are susceptible to blackspot, also caused by fungus, especially when using their energy to flower.

You need to identify common fungal diseases, which will spread to other plants in the garden, so you can treat them. Today, we are going to deal with powdery mildew, blackspot, leaf spot on hydrangeas and peony leaf blotch, which ran rampant in spring 2011 but hasn’t raised its ugly head much this year. Who knows why.

Powdery mildew is just that, a fungal disease that makes plant leaves and stems look as though they’ve been dusted with powder. The mildew won’t affect the flowering and it won’t kill the plant, but it does weaken and make it look ugly. It will spread to other plants, although many are resistant. Powdery mildew begins on garden phlox. (You can buy new hybridized plants, such as David and Volcano, that have been bred to be resistant.)

Even though you see powdery mildew in August, it actually begins long before. So if you have plants that get powdery mildew every year, you need to start treating them when the growing season begins.

You can buy a fungicide specifically for powdery mildew or make one. Add 1 teaspoon of baking soda to1 liter of water, shake and spray. Use this about every two weeks and keep the plants well watered at ground level. Because the spores that cause powdery mildew overwinter in the soil, you need to spray the ground around the plants as well as the leaves and stems.

Blackspot is exactly what you’d think — a black spot on the rose leaf. It may start off yellow or brown but will turn black and spread. You can remove a few infected leaves; however, if it is widespread, you will need to treat the bush. Always water roses in the morning, water them at ground level (not overhead) and keep them well watered. There are many commercial sprays for blackspot or you can make your own. Put 3 teaspoons of baking soda, a few drops of dish soap or liquid hand soap and a heaping teaspoon of water soluble fertilizer into a cup of water and shake. Add this to 1 gallon of water in a sprayer and spray every two weeks. This works on both blackspot and mildew on roses. You should start this in early spring and continue throughout the growing season.

Leaf spot on hydrangeas is easily identified as spots of purple, brown or tan. They  usually show up later in the season. It will not harm the plant, but if you want to, you can remove the infected leaves or treat it with a fungicide.

Peony leaf blotch is caused largely by lack of air circulation around the plants. If you planted three or four small bushes 15 years ago, they are probably crowded now and don’t get good air flow. Peony leaf blotch starts in early spring as a small, shiny usually purple spot on the top of the leaf with brown spots on the underside. It progresses depending on humidity and heat levels. Take off individual leaves, water from the ground only and treat peonies with the homemade formula for roses or a purchased fungicide. If it is late in the season, simply cut the infected branches to the ground.

In all of these cases, there are a few things to keep in mind. Fungus comes from a spore and spreads through spores. Spores travel in water so if you use an overhead sprinkler (or when it rains), water drops fall onto the fungus and splash spores onto other leaves. For plants with fungus, cut them to the ground in the fall; clean up stems, dead leaves and other debris from the area; and dispose of the clippings in the trash, not in a compost pile where the fungus will live and spread. Cut out any stems on roses that show signs of infection early in the spring and begin the required treatments.

There is always the option of removing plants that are prone to fungal diseases, but I have a hard time doing that. If you don’t, rip away and plant something new.

Until next time, watch for fireflies, picnic by a shady stream and enjoy those flowers you work so hard to make pretty.

Happy gardening.

Jody Goodwin has been gardening for more than 25 years. She lives in Turner with her husband, Ike, and two cats. She may be reached by writing to her in care of the Sun Journal, 104 Park St., Lewiston, Maine, 04243-4400 or by e-mail at jodyike@megalink.net.

Gardening with Peter Cundall 18.8.12

Gardening with Peter Cundall 18.8.12

18/08/2012 , 1:06 PM by Alice Wood

On the gardening front today, a problem with possums brought a hale of solutions.  While Peter is sticking by the old school method of covering your garden with netting, you may also like to try Mike’s tip – he mixed cayenne pepper with honey and smeared it along the fence the possum favoured as a bridge to his veges. Apparently the possum licked the honey from its feet and has not been back. Other problems tackled today were with hazelnuts, lemons, begonias and blackcurrants. For all this plus tips on getting “horticultural justice” in the face of twitch, click on the audio link below:

Download the audio file

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Readers’ tips: your favourite historic UK gardens

Winning tip: Mount Stewart House, County Down

You can’t beat a garden and tearoom combo to blow away the cobwebs at any time of year, and Mount Stewart House at Newtownards delivers. There are Spanish and Italianate gardens, a funky shamrock garden, 80 acres of woodland and the chance to see seals on Strangford Lough. And the tearoom? It makes its own ice-cream – a treat after all that healthy fresh air.
028-4278 8387, nationaltrust.org.uk/mount-stewart, adult £6.36, child £3.18
Arstar123

Kent

Sissinghurst Castle
There are 10 gardens here created in the 1930s on derelict land by two writers, Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicolson, around romantic, mellow pink brick Tudor buildings high on the Weald of Kent. What she called “rooms open to the sky” are intimate gardens, each with its own character, enclosed by old walls and hedges, each planted differently by colour or theme.
01580 710701, nationaltrust.org.uk/sissinghurst-castle, £10.40/£5
terryphilpot

London


Chiswick House and Gardens
Photograph: Richard Bryant/Bolton Quinn

Chiswick House Gardens
In the 1990s I used to walk Yogi, a joyful Bouvier des Flandres, in these gardens. Yogi is long gone, but the gardens are in better shape than ever after a £12.1m facelift courtesy of National Lottery funding. An artificial lake, classic bridge, cascade of waterfalls and even an Inigo Jones gateway are just some of the treasures hidden among the specimen trees and latticework of pathways in this early example of English landscape gardening.
Chiswick W4, 020-8742 3905, chgt.org.uk, gardens free, Chiswick House, £5.70/£3.40
Lizcleere

Cumbria

Brantwood Gardens, Coniston
The house was the home of John Ruskin for the last 20 years of his life. The gardens are set into the hillside, and give an insight into the mind of this great Victorian polymath. There are eight themed gardens, some radical (Dante’s Purgatorial Mount), some medicinal, others dedicated to ferns (more than 250). Having spent a few hours wandering around the gardens, (and house) you’ll get an appreciation of the troubled mind of Ruskin.
015394 41396, brantwood.org.uk, £6.30/£1.35
Moleycule

Northumberland


Howick Gardens
Photograph: Murdo MacLeod

Howick Hall Gardens, Alnwick
Read all the historic family gossip on the menu in the Earl Grey Tea House after you have seen the herbaceous borders, formal gardens, bog garden and woodland garden. Leave time for the Long Walk through woodland to the sea where, in the 1830s, Earl Grey sent each of his 15 children on the first full moon in the July after their 10th birthday. It is quite the most idyllic combination of formal and natural planting, wild sea and land, divine tea and scones.
01665 577285, howickhallgardens.org, £6.60/free
rojo23

Wiltshire

The Courts Garden, Holt, near Bradford-on-Avon
Take a stroll around the kitchen gardens, wildlife areas and arboretums all planted with stunning flowers and shrubs. I have been to most National Trust gardens and this classic early-20th-century one is my favourite. After a perfect meal in the lovely tearoom take a short signposted walk across nearby scenic fields to Great Chalfield Manor, another gem.
01225 782875, nationaltrust.org.uk/courts-garden, £6.10/£3.05
Chrisbocci

Gloucestershire


The Dutch Water Garden at Westbury Court
Photograph: Alamy

Westbury Court Garden, Westbury-on-Severn
This unique and exquisite 17th-century Dutch water garden, with canals and ponds full of water lilies and lawns bordered by attractive topiary, is best seen from the first floor of the summer house at the far end. A walk takes you to herb and vegetable plots and a stunning display of very old espaliers. There are no cafe facilities but picnics on the lawns are encouraged.
01452 760461, nationaltrust.org.uk/westbury-court-garden, £4.85/£2.35
Jenandbrian

Aberdeenshire

Pitmedden Garden, Ellon
The garden was created in the 17th century by Sir Alexander Seton. A weather vane commemorates an incident near Aberdeen, where his father was killed by a cannonball. Now, all is peaceful. Be soothed by formal parterres and rows of clipped yews. Stand by the sundial and listen to oystercatchers. Stroll past pleached limes and the herb garden to find the Museum of Farming Life.
0844 493 2177, nts.org.uk/property/pitmedden-garden, £6/free
busylizzie51

Carmarthenshire

Aberglasney Gardens, Llangathen
Tucked away in the hills, these gardens took seed some 500 years ago. Much history and several lost fortunes later the gardens (they were derelict in 1995), have been restored to their original design. With an ancient yew tunnel, areas including a cloister garden and a walled garden, plus lovely walks, time passes all too quickly. The licensed tearoom serves excellent light lunches and teas. There are plants for sale, too, so you can take home a living memento of your visit.
01558 668998, aberglasney.org, £7.27/£3.63
robynmary

Monmouthshire

Dewstow House and hidden gardens, Caldicot
Begin by watching the eight-minute film screened in the bright cafe at the entrance. You learn that these Grade I-listed Edwardian gardens, filled in in the 1940s, remained lost, even in local memory, until 2000, when a new owner began excavating. Then wander through the gardens, finding lakes, fountains, a bog garden, horticultural surprises at every turn, even a croquet lawn. Most amazing are the subterranean grottoes, ferny and mossy, with tiny streams and little niches. The plant sale is good, parking is free, and the welcome is great.
01291 431020, dewstowgardens.co.uk, £6.50/£4
jenandbrian

Ruth’s tips: Sago palm; summer-flowering native plants

Click photo to enlarge

Walnut Creek’s Ruth Bancroft is a national authority on drought-resistant gardening. Twice a month, she and her staff share their knowledge with readers.

Q We read the column about the Chilean Wine Palm, and this was perfect timing, because we have a Sago Palm that has two growths emerging from it. The photo shows only the growth on the side; the other is in the middle of the tree. We would appreciate whatever you can tell us about all this.

A The Sago Palm, Cycas revoluta, is not really a palm at all, but a cycad. Cycads are cone-bearing plants, not flowering plants like palms, and the yellow growth in the photo is a cone that will eventually wither. Then new flushes of leaves will continue to emerge from time to time as the head continues to grow.

Cycads have separate male and female plants, and the cone on your plant indicates it is a male; females have a feathery reproductive structure, which yields red seeds when pollinated.

The Sago Palm is native to southern Japan; it is one of the most cold-hardy of all the cycads and is able to withstand temperatures of less than 20 degrees Fahrenheit. In time, it can grow to be 10 feet tall, with a clump of trunks. If new trunks forming at the sides result in a plant that is too large for the space, it is possible to cut out some of the trunks.

Though not the thirstiest of plants, Sago Palms are not arid-adapted, and they appreciate

regular watering.

Q In our backyard, we have a garden of California native plants. There are lots of flowers in the spring, but by late summer, there is not much going on. Do you have any suggestions for native plants that could give us color at this time of year?

A In spring, with both warm temperatures and the moisture provided by the winter rainy season, plenty of native plants put on a floral show. Later in the summer, there are fewer colorful choices. At the Ruth Bancroft Garden, here are some of our favorites for summer color:

  • Epilobium canum (often sold under the synonym of Zauschneria californica): This gray-green ground-cover, known as California Fuchsia, has bright scarlet to orange tubular flowers in late summer to fall.

  • Salvia clevelandii, or California Blue Sage: This fragrant shrub with blue-purple flowers can bloom all summer if given a little supplementary water.

  • Mimulus aurantiacus and Mimulus cardinalis: The native Monkey Flowers are summer-bloomers. As with the Salvia, a little extra water can keep the flowers coming until fall.

  • Eriogonum fasciculatum (California Buckwheat) and Eriogonum giganteum (St. Catherine’s Lace): These two white-flowering Buckwheats bloom later than most of the others. E. fasciculatum is a small shrub with green leaves, while St. Catherine’s Lace grows to about 5 feet and has white-felted leaves.

  • Dendromecon harfordii (the Island Bush Poppy): This large shrub has blue-green leaves and bright yellow flowers. The heaviest bloom is in spring, but some shrubs flower almost year-round.

    If you have a question for the Ruth Bancroft Garden, email info@ruthbancroftgarden.org. For tour and event information, go to www.ruthbancroftgarden.org.

  • Garden Calendar for Aug. 17 to 23

    Saturday

    Brazos Valley Farmers Market, 8 a.m. to noon. Texas Avenue and William Joel Bryan Parkway in Bryan. Locally grown fresh produce and other items. www.brazosvalley farmersmarket.com, wisefamily farm@gmail.com or 229-5503.

    YouTube gardeners: dishing the dirt online

    Exploding the myths

    It is the demystification that appeals to Claire Burgess, who has been making
    videos of her allotment in suburban Surrey since 2007 (youtube.com/user/clairesallotment).

    “I wanted to help people who are starting out and don’t know how to approach
    the task,” says Claire, who has no formal training. “Book explanations can
    be a bit confusing. I wanted to show how to do something which may not be
    the ‘traditional’ way, but that still works.”

    Claire’s videos range from how-to guides to sharing joyful moments on her
    plot. Recent examples include harvesting broad beans, advice on saving water
    and footage of a family of great tits that took up residence.

    Claire now has more than 2,600 regular viewers who subscribe to her “channel”,
    and her videos have been watched nearly 800,000 times.

    Her style is casual and chatty. She films the unscripted videos herself,
    generally in one take, using a digital video camera on a tripod. The films
    are then edited by her husband Mark. “I try not to ramble on, but that’s the
    joy of editing. Mark isn’t a gardener, so if it makes sense to him, then I
    know it’s OK.”

    She has subscribers from as far afield as the United States and Australia with
    whom she swaps tips. She also updates via a blog, Facebook and Twitter. She
    says gardeners must be willing to respond to changes on the plot and the
    weather. Next, she’s planning a video on slug control.

    Warts and all

    Flexibility is the key to a useful video for Terry Walton, the allotment
    expert on Jeremy Vine’s Radio 2 show. He posts his monthly video “Tales From
    Terry’s Allotment” through Gardenersclick.com,
    an online community for gardeners and allotmenteers. “You can script it,
    then you get to the garden and something could have eaten the crop you were
    going to talk about, so you have to deviate. If something’s failed, we’ll
    show it, warts and all.”

    That quality is precisely why Sean James Cameron believes that there is an
    appetite for watching the work of amateur gardeners. He is a freelance
    television producer and founder of The Horticultural Channel (thehorticulturalchannel.info),
    a site which is a viewing platform for a number of different YouTube
    channels. “Viewers love to be told when a gardener hasn’t done something
    right or a crop has failed. It’s real life and that attracts a following,”
    says Sean.

    His belief in the popularity of the YouTube gardeners is such that last year
    he produced a self-funded show, Amateur Gardener, broadcast on Sky
    Digital using the YouTube gardeners – including Claire – as presenters. He
    is now attempting to raise sponsorship for a second series. In the meantime,
    he believes that The Horticultural Channel is offering the best of the
    amateur YouTube gardeners on the web.

    A point of reference

    One regular YouTuber who has built up a solid following is Dan Unsworth, (youtube.com/user/allotmentdiary)
    a potter from near Settle, North Yorkshire.

    He has been sharing pottery videos for five years and, as a keen vegetable
    grower and competitor in shows, he decided to chart his progress on video
    and a blog. His laid-back approach (he thinks nothing of munching on his
    freshly harvested veg as he films) has attracted hundreds of thousands of
    hits. Dan is currently gearing up for the Harrogate Show in September.

    “I put up a video about my potato blight and people told me they had it the
    month before me – it was reassuring to know I at least had some decent spuds
    and they had none,” he says.

    “The videos are good for reference too. You can look back at where you were at
    this point last year – depressing this year, thanks to the rain.” He also
    shares some of his favourite growing tips. A star video was one showing how
    to grow new potatoes in containers, which produced great yields for him and
    some of his followers who tried it.

    “I look forward to people’s feedback; that’s what makes it worthwhile. I’m not
    doing it for any other reason; I have no designs to be the next Alan
    Titchmarsh.”

    For now, the amateur gardeners’ efforts are unlikely to eclipse their
    mainstream television counterparts. There is still some scepticism in the
    industry – NSALG hedged its enthusiasm by suggesting viewers cross-reference
    videos with material by “horticultural experts”. And no one is in it for the
    money. Dan and Claire make nominal amounts from their videos through the
    Google ads which surround them, but they’re certainly not quitting the day
    jobs.

    “Maybe if I put up a video of me tripping over my giant marrow and hurting
    myself, that would go viral and I’d make millions,” says Dan. “For now I’ll
    stick to spud blight. It’s more rewarding in other ways.”

    Tips for first-time video gardeners

    Keep videos short and sweet – around five minutes will
    hold interest.

    Make plants the star of the show – people want to see the
    fruits of your labours, so keep the focus on that rather than on you.

    Show detail – one long shot isn’t very useful. Make sure you
    do close-ups so viewers can see the size of seeds, or condition of the
    crops.

    Don’t over-script it – think about what you’re going to say,
    but be flexible, react to the season, what’s happening that day and feedback
    from viewers

    Set yourself a broadcast day and time. If viewers can rely on
    you to put up regular material, they will keep coming back.

    Be yourself – if viewers can see the real you, your videos
    will be more memorable and will stand out.

    Use social networks – once your videos are up and running,
    promote yourself via a blog, Facebook page or Twitter. The more exposure,
    the better.

    To create your own channel on YouTube, see youtube.com,
    select “Upload” and follow the instructions

    Get gardening advice from the experts with the new Spalding Bulb blog

    Latest News

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    Tips to keep lawn, plants healthy while away from home

    August is the month for vacationing. It’s tough to mow the lawn, keep the flowers watered and contend with thirsty hanging baskets when you’re spending a week at the beach.

    Here are a few questions from readers along with my tips for putting a garden on vacation.

    Q. How often must I mow the lawn in August? If we go on vacation for two weeks is it okay to wait until we return to mow the lawn? We do not want to pay someone to mow while we are away, but don’t want a dead lawn when we return. I know, we are cheap and lazy. Don’t print my name. Anon, email

    A. Cheap and lazy is permitted two weeks out of the year when it comes to lawn care. Just don’t fertilize before you leave on your vacation. You are also are not allowed to pout if you return to a lawn that has “gone golden” or turned brown during the dry days of August.

    In our climate, lawns that are allowed to go dormant in the summer with no additional water do return to a healthy green in the fall when the rains return. Be sure to mow and edge the lawn before you leave – and don’t scalp a tall lawn by cutting it low when you return. Set the mower to the highest level, remove the top third of the blades then wait a few days and mow again to gradually shorten an overgrown lawn. The best advice about how often to mow in our climate is to remove one third the height of the grass when the blades get to be 2 to 3 inches tall. Usually once a week in August.

    Q. What are we supposed to do with our hanging baskets before we leave for vacation? I remember once you wrote a column about leaving your plants behind. Thanks. G.T., Tacoma

    A. Hanging baskets do not do well without water during the end of summer because the mature plants have roots that have grown to fill all the soil space. The best solution is to have someone water daily while you are away, but I may have written about how to cut back petunias and other hanging plants by one half right before you leave town. This is a drastic way of getting rid of faded blooms and also stimulates annuals to send out new growth for a second act this fall. The reason to do this before you go on vacation is so that you don’t have to look at the ugly results of such drastic action. The reality is that during warm weather hanging baskets may need water twice a day. You may want to just let your baskets hang out at a friend’s house while you are gone.

    Potted plant tip: Some potted plants will just never have a drinking problem and can adapt to a week or so without any extra water at all. Yuccas, sedums and succulents are three that should be used in pots far away from a water source or in gardens where watering is a hit or miss affair. Notice how small pots like ornamental urns dry out so quickly? Use drought-resistant sedums or spiky yuccas in these formal-looking footed pots and they’ll be “urning” your respect all summer.

    Q. I have a hanging plant that has blue flowers but it is not lobelia. It takes full sun and the flowers are kinda small but radiate out from the stem. I lost the plant tag. Can you tell what it is? P., Email

    A. My best guess on your mystery plant is scaevola, either “Blue Wonder” or “New Wonder” as this is one of the few true blue hanging plants that do well in the sun. This drought-resistant bloomer is from Australia so it can take the heat. A nice surprise is that the scaevola are perennials in mild winter climates so you can move your basket into a garage or basement this fall and see if you can keep it alive until next summer. The trick with overwintering tender perennials is to keep the plants dormant by giving them just a bit of water once a month and keeping them in a cold, dark location so they sleep through winter. In April you can repot, fertilize and hang your Scaevola basket up again for an encore performance.

    Marianne Binetti is the author of “Easy Answers for Great Gardens” and eight other gardening books. She has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and will answer questions at her website binettigarden.com.

    Amy Holzberger: Garden folklore: facts and fiction

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    Garden myths are just about everywhere. You’ve probably heard them from your well-intentioned neighbor or family members. Television and radio shows all offer a wealth of anecdotal advice — and not all of it is trustworthy. Start a conversation about gardening with just about anyone and you’ll likely walk away with a “tip” or two.

    The Internet has also provided excellent means to propagate (yes, pun intended) bogus gardening tips based on little valid scientific research.

    This article will attempt to help you separate the facts from the fiction in some of the garden lore that has been handed down for years. Countdown style, and in no particular order, here are a dozen popular ones:

    Garlic repels insects

    This is true. Are you repulsed by getting too close to someone who has eaten too much garlic? Well, insects find the odor of garlic to be just as offensive. In the ’90s, a group of researchers concocted a recipe that was effective in repelling insects. The recipe is 5 ounces of garlic extract, several drops of liquid soap and one quart of water. Blend well and strain through two layers of cheesecloth. Dilute this solution to 10 percent of the original concentration before spraying on affected plants. This mixture will not kill any insects, it will only repel them. While the spray has been shown to be especially effective on whiteflies, aphids and most beetles, the downside is your plants will smell like garlic for up to two weeks. If you are absolutely against commercial insecticides, this may be a “solution” for you. Which brings me to …

    Organic pesticides are less toxic than synthetic ones

    This is purely fiction. Misused pesticides are harmful, regardless of whether they are considered natural, organic, chemical or synthetic. Whenever possible, select the least toxic control option available. Even without being lethal, many pesticides can cause serious health complications if improperly used. Store these products properly to prevent harmful accidents, read and follow all label directions, and remember that these products are tools, not miracle workers. Pesticides will not correct mistakes made in plant selection, installation or maintenance. Speaking of plant installation…

    Some late summer gardening tips

    Ed Close

    The heat this summer makes us all miserable. It does the same thing to our pets, so we need to make sure they have a shady spot and fresh water.

    Our gardens suffer from the heat, too. Most of us just pour more water at the plants, hoping theyll survive, but there are ways to protect the plants and even make them thrive in these conditions.

    If you have automatic watering systems, set them to go on at night after the heat of the day has passed. This method of watering loses a lot less up to a third of the water to evaporation. This also allows the water to soak into the soil down deep where roots that feed the plants grow.

    Another thing you can do is mulch your vegetable gardens and flowerbeds. There are all sorts of things you can use for mulch. If you have a compost pile, that would work just great. A good thick layer will shade the roots and allow them to stay moist longer. The plants may wilt above ground but theyll usually spring back when evening comes.

    If you dont have a compost pile, then several other options are available, this newspaper among them! Layers of newspaper between the rows of vegetable gardens keeps the soil shaded, and reduces evaporation. And, as an added bonus, it reduces the number of weeds significantly. That means more time for you to sit in the shade with some lemonade or iced tea, instead of bending over in the hot sun to weed.

    Many stores carry wood chips in bales. These work well for the same purposes. Farm stores often have oat straw, which works just fine, but if you use this be prepared to pull oats as they will certainly sprout and start to grow.

    Cardboard works well as mulch, as it is thicker than newspaper and lasts a good, long time. Its organic and can be allowed to rot right into the ground or be tilled under in the spring when you get ready to plant. To use paper or cardboard in flowerbeds, cut the material into strips long enough to cover the ground between plants but narrow enough not to crush the leaves. Once you have them in place, water them well so they are too heavy for the wind to blow away, which also helps them stick to the ground.

    Some stores carry humus. It is usually quite inexpensive and works exactly the same as leaf mold in a forest. The earthworms love humus and will turn it into topsoil for you so you dont have to buy any more of that.

    The main idea is to protect the root crowns from the heat and keep them moist. If you can get them to survive through the hot weather, the root crowns will burst forth with growth in the spring, and the mulch you put on because of the heat will also help the plants during winter months by protecting the root crowns from the cold.

    I hope you have good luck out there in your gardens. It might pay to do the mulching early in the morning or in the evening to protect yourself from the heat as well.