Gardening in Shade - Planting Basics
Planting is a no-brainer...right? Wrong! One of the easiest ways to waste money is to buy a plant, dig a hole in what passes for soil in your yard and plop it in. Unless you are among the few blessed with deep loam soil, some plants will survive this, but a great many will depart to that great compost heap in the sky. Many gardeners, when faced with the death of a plant, immediately start to blame the nursery who sold them the plant, insects or disease when the real cause is improper planting techniques.
Soil Preparation
You may have read the old adage - "Plant a $1.00 plant in a $10.00 hole". It's not far off the mark.
The soil in which you place your plant is as important to your plant as what you eat and where you live are to you. Even more so, since plants can't get up and move if the cupboard is bare or the room it has is too small, and you can.
The soil in which you place your plant is as important to your plant as what you eat and where you live are to you. Even more so, since plants can't get up and move if the cupboard is bare or the room it has is too small, and you can.
Plant roots are their lifelines. If the roots can't function properly, the plant either grows poorly or dies. Large, vigorous root masses are way more important than flowers to a plant. Roots need water, air and nutrients. They constantly grow at the tips seeking these elements, so it follows that if the soil around the roots is loose (fluffy, open, workable - whatever you like to call soil of good tilth), they will be able to grow more easily than if it is a solid block of clay concrete. Loose soil also permits water to penetrate more easily and deeply and contains more air spaces for the exchange of gasses necessary for plant life. Of course, I am not referring to bog or water plants here, but to the majority of plants we grow in our gardens.
I also need to point out that I garden on a clay based soil. Those of you who garden on sandy soil will have more problems retaining moisture and nutrients and fewer problems providing plants with open soil. The planting techniques will be similar, no matter what soil you have, but the soil preparation I describe will be slightly different for you.
Clearing
Once you have decided where to put your plant, the first step is clearing the soil of whatever vegetation is currently occupying it. You can hand weed - which I recommend because intimate contact with your soil helps you understand it - or you can use an herbicide.
If you hand weed, make sure that you remove the roots and crowns of the plants you pull, not just the stems. Many weeds will regenerate from their crowns or roots, so you want to make sure you remove those.
To Dig or Not To Dig
There are probably as many methods of preparing soil for planting as there are gardeners; everybody develops their own "best" way after a while. You can dig soil by hand, turn it with a tiller or plow or leave the native soil, covering it with organic material (variations on the lasagna bed method). Your soil, your physical abilities and what you intend to plant will help determine which method you use. I've tried everything but using a plow. They all have their plusses and minuses.
Happy Planting! If you need help planting your next tree or an overall garden maintenance is needed, check out Portland TT’s services. See ya' later.
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Organic Gardening - Assembling Your Organic Arsenal
Fall is a great time of year to start your conversion to organic gardening, if you don’t practice natural methods already. The heat lessens, we get a bit more rain, and plants make a final surge before heading into dormancy. Now is the time to start gathering (or updating) your organic arsenal!
Ideally, gardening organically allows nature to take its course without the use of outside sources. However, in organic gardening, there are a few helpers you’ll need before getting started. I’m not talking about a sturdy trowel or a big strong teenage nephew (although each can be darned handy in the garden). What I’m referring to are some basic products that will help keep your organic garden strong and healthy.
These products fall into four categories: fertilizers, herbicides, fungicides and insecticides. Let’s take them one at a time:
Fertilizers
Put simply, fertilizers enhance the growth of a plant. In organic gardening, fertilizers are used to maintain the proper balance of nutrients in the soil that can be depleted over time due to natural soil erosion, planting and watering.
In organic gardening, the primary fertilizer you need to use is compost. A handful tossed under a plant every few weeks and watered in provides a great nutritious snack for all of your plants, indoors and out.
Compost tea, a liquid made from compost, is also a wonderful additive, either used as a drench or a foliar spray. While there are lots of complicated recipes for brewing manure compost tea, there is a much easier source: Lee Valley Tools sells compost tea bags, called Barnyard Tea and they are wonderful. (See the Referenced Links section at the bottom for their website address.)
Other fertilizers that can be helpful when dealing with certain plants requiring lots of trace minerals include fish emulsion, seaweed, Epsom salts, molasses, earthworm castings, wood ashes, bone or blood meal, and soft rock phosphates.
Organic gardening books are extremely helpful when trying to determine what plants like which minerals.
Herbicides
Inundated with dandelions? Crabby because of crab grass? Among organic gardeners, chemical herbicides are routinely reviled for both their propensity for wiping everything out and frequent false claims of being safe for the soil. So what’s an organic gardener supposed to use on pesky weeds and invasive grasses?
Well, first you should know there are two kinds of herbicides: “selective” and “non-selective”. From the terms, you can probably guess their definitions; “selectives” affect only the plants they’re designed to kill, while “non-selectives” pretty much kill anything they come in contact with.
Believe it or not, the most popular organic herbicide is powerful enough to be designated as “non-selective”. Like its chemical counterparts, it can be dangerous if splashed onto the skin, in the eyes, or if the fumes are breathed.
It also makes great pickles. It is, of course, vinegar.>/p>
For an effective organic herbicide, 10% acetic acid white vinegar (sold at many farm supply stores) sprayed on weeds, especially in the heat of the afternoon, provides effective weed and grass control. But be careful - it’ll kill everything it touches. Don’t spray it on a windy day, keep a safe distance, where long sleeves and pants, and make sure your eyes are covered.
For an even more effective mix, add 1 oz. Orange oil and 1 teaspoon of liquid dish soap to each gallon of 10% vinegar. And the “selective” organic method of ridding unwanted weeds and plants? It’s called hand-pulling.
Fungicides
Even though we encourage natural microorganisms in the soil, sometimes they can go overboard. More specifically, too much moisture invites a parasitic form of fungi to form where it’s not wanted.
As with herbicides and pesticides, there are lots of horror stories that can be told about synthetic fungicides and their negative effect on living organisms, but I’ll spare you the gory details. All you need to know is that converting to natural fungicides is probably the easiest step to make when turning to organics.
One of the most effective organic fungicides is baking soda. Four teaspoons mixed in a gallon of water with 1 tablespoon of horticultural oil and sprayed lightly on foliage of plants treats black spot, powdery mildew, brown patch and other fungal diseases. You really just can’t beat it. The other fungicide I routinely use is horticultural cornmeal. Scratched into the soil around the base of plants, it is a good disease fighter and preventative for future fungus problems, as well as those pesky fungus gnats. Lastly, my orchid-growing friends recommend a cinnamon rub directly onto leaves for stopping black spots in their tracks on their precious phrags and phals.
Many of the big home improvement centers are beginning to sell organic products like 10% vinegar, Bt, horticultural cornmeal, pre-prepared orange oil, garlic spray and Bt. This is really good news for anyone wanting to convert to organics. If you can’t find any of these items in a store near you, Gardens Alive! has a great line of all-organic products available by mail or internet order.
Need a cleanup for your garden, drawing the insects away and have a better and more organic garden? Be sure to check out Portland TT. They have professional experts with years of experience ready to help.
Yard and Garden Planning - Fall Gardening Focuses on Bulbs and Blooms Planting Bulbs for Spring Blooms
Small bulbs can yield a spectacular display when you least expect it, even before the snow melts. Plant spring-flowering bulbs now to transform your yard into a colorful carpet.
Crocus are some of the first bulbs to bloom in the spring, and may even show up before the snow has completely melted off the lawn. Chionodoxa, or Glory-of-the-Snow, at right, add subtle hues with delicate pastel-colored flowers. As with grape hyacinths, right, and scilla, Glory-of-the-Snow will multiply naturally, so your spring show may be more spectacular as the years go by.
Planting small flowers in a large area will require lots of bulbs to make a colorful statement. But don't plant them in straight rows or scatter them too far apart. About 6 inches apart in all directions will create a more intense show of color. Plant each bulb about 3 to 4 inches deep, growing tip up, just after it rains or after you have watered the lawn so the soil will be easier to cut into. Using a sharp-tipped trowel will make it even easier to create a small opening in the grass.
Another way to get a naturalized look and a sea of color is to plant small bulbs under deciduous shrubs. Scilla, or Siberian Squill, can be planted in masses to create a bright blue drift under a shrub border early in the season, before the shrubs have leafed out. Scilla bulbs should be placed about 4 inches apart. Over the years, they will spread and fill the area with tiny blue flowers.
Or, try the early risers striped squill, or Puschkinia. The blooms are bluish-white, with a delicate blue stripe running the length of each petal. It, too, will multiply and fill an area with a mass of color. If you have an open border, mass miniature 'Tom Thumb' daffodils and blue scilla. This eye-catching combination is spectacular for a long time.
After flowers fade on spring-blooming bulbs, don't cut the foliage off too soon. Mow the lawn at a height of 3 to 3-1/2 inches so you don't remove much of the bulb foliage. Leave the foliage until it turns yellow and brown; this will help the plants build up food reserves in the bulb for next year's floral display.
The Colorful Chrysanthemum
Chrysanthemums add mounds of color and blend beautifully with the natural colors of fall. But not all mums are suitable for the garden.
Florist's mums add instant color, but their colorful blooms don't last long and will die with the first frost. Garden mums, however, are hardy to Zone 5 and will still bloom after a few light freezes in the fall.
Mums are "short day plants," producing flower buds when the days are shorter than the nights. There are some new varieties, however, that will form flowers under any day length. Check with your local garden center.
Plant mums at least 6 weeks before a killing frost so that their roots have time to become established. Be careful with their stems; they can be quite brittle.
If you want professional help to plant the spring-flowering shrubs, maintaining your garden and more, check out Portland TT for more information.
Dwarf Evergreen Shrubs Enhance Shady North-facing Front Landscapes
Low-maintenance small evergreen shrubs are first-rate selections for DIY landscape foundation plantings. They enrich the looks of shady front yard landscapes.
Plant breeders continue to introduce shrubs that save maintenance time, effort, and money. These introductions are smaller than their normal-sized relatives and often labeled as dwarfs. They are relatively disease and pest resistant. Both needle-leaf and broad-leaf evergreen varieties offer year-round color interest.
The 19th century tradition of foundation plantings persists in many regions. Problems result when small trees and shrubs overwhelm foundation area spaces. Habitually, shearing plants into contorted shapes is used to maintain optimal sizes. This practice leads to bizarre looking and unhealthy plants.
Plant Suggestions
Below are suggestions for up-to-the-minute low-maintenance dwarf evergreen landscape plants for foundation landscape plantings. These plants are relatively slow growing and require little maintenance over the years. Shearing distorts their natural positive features and requires unnecessary work. Most do not require pruning except for snipping off wayward and winter-killed branches.
Suggestions are for plantings two to three layers deep:
• small ground-huggers if desired
• medium fillers, and
• dynamic background plants.
Ultimate heights of mature plants are lower than most front windows. Because these plants appear small when bought in containers, it is important to space according to mature spread. This avoids overcrowding of mature plants.
Paxistima canbyi - Canby Paxistima - North American Native
• Size, Habit and Form: 12" tall, spreading to 3' or 4' or more, low, with multiple stems that are fine and flexible;
• Features: summer foliage is lustrous dark green color with leaves crowded on stems; autumn foliage bronzes a little; flowers in early May, not particularly showy, are small greenish or reddish, held in small clusters;
• Culture: prefers moist but well-drained soil, likes high soil organic matter content, tolerates high pH soils (alkaline); full sun is best, but does well in partial shade; avoid high fertilization.
Taxus baccata ‘Repandens’ - Spreading English Yew
• Size, Habit and Form – will reach 2 to 4' high by 10' wide in time but can easily be kept smaller; set plants 3' on center and prune lightly to maintain low growing, softly arching branches; form develops best when English yew has room to spread and is left unpruned;
• Features - tolerates temperatures as low as -20 degrees F/-28 degrees C; 'Repandens’ is a female clone, so it bears fruit; bark, foliage and fruit can be toxic to children and grazing animals; one of the few conifers that thrives in shade. Generally pest and disease free, but can develop scale (and resulting sooty mold) and black vine weevil;
• Culture - prefers well-drained soil and is drought tolerant once established.
Daphne odora ‘Aureomarginata’ - Variegated Winter Daphne
• Size, Habit and Form – grows to 4' high and 5 or 6' across with time; may grow fast in right conditions, however, it often reaches only about two-thirds optimal size;
• Qualities - small waxy-looking fragrant flowers that emerge from purple buds in March and April; long, narrow leaves edged in creamy gold;
• Culture – likes fertile, humus-rich, well-drained soil in part shade, foliage burns in hot afternoon sun, drought tolerant once established; mulch in March, add a handful of all-purpose organic fertilizer to keep foliage a rich green, prune lightly in summer to encourage dense growth.
Sarcococca hookeriana var humilis (sometimes just S. humilis) – Dwarf Sweetbox (or Sweetbox)
• Size, Habit and Form – 1 to 2' high in time if never sheared; spreads slowly over area to 3' wide;
• Qualities - tiny creamy-white tubular fragrant flowers begin in February and continue throughout late winter; male and female flowers on same bush are followed by purple-black berries that add ornamental value;
• Culture – likes organically rich soil, tolerates a bit of drought after regular watering its first year; may be sheared each spring for increased compactness.
Skimmia japonica - Japanese Skimmia
• Size, Habit and Form – 3 to 4' high, 3 to 4' wide; growth rate is slow; medium texture appearance, dense rounded mound, foliage is medium green crowded at end of 2.5 to 5" long stem;
• Qualities – creamy white flowers with mild fragrance emerge from glossy red-maroon buds, showy red fruit follow on female plants;Culture - Partial shade to shade; prefers moist, well-drained soil enriched with organic matter.
Leucothoe axillaris - North American Native
• Size, Habit and Form – 3 to 6' high, 3 to 6' spread, showy red-tipped new foliage;
• Qualities – white flowers in pendant clusters in early summer;
• Culture - part shade to full shade, medium moisture.
Leucothoe fontanesiana
• Size, Habit and Form - slightly larger in form than above, however, characteristics similar;
• Several cultivars available:
1. 'Girard's Rainbow' - foliage emerges white, pink and coppery on this selection, maturing to green streaked with cream; less vigorous than the species, but handsome;
2. 'Mary Elizabeth' - dwarf form with finely-textured, narrow foliage that bronzes in winter.
3. 'Nana' (perhaps the same as 'Compacta') - a dense, dwarf form reaching 2' tall and wider;
4. 'Scarletta' – easy to find in commerce, notable for its deep red new growth and bronzy-purple winter hue;
5. 'Silver Run' - variegated form that appears to be hardier than 'Girard's Rainbow', offers foliage marked with creamy white area.
If you need help maintaining your garden or cutting trees by a team of professional experts with years of experience, check out Portland TT.
Compost = home grown fertility
Organic gardeners avoid using modern synthetic fertilisers, and rely primarily on organic matter to feed their plants. Fresh organic matter has to be processed or 'composted' in some form to release the plant nutrients it contains.
Even though composting depicts decay of once living materials into constituent ingredients, it is useful to think of compost as a living organism, at least whilst it is being made. It will give you an insight as to how composting is best controlled and the processing time minimised.
Aims of good compost making
The idea of composting often brings up visions of ‘muck and magic’, but the aim of good composting is, in a few months, to produce a rich soil-like material full of plant nutrients.
Well-matured compost is not unpleasant to handle, and has a soft, pleasant earthy smell.
Needs
Think of 'working' compost as a living organism and its needs are the same as your own:
• somewhere to live - with shelter from wind and rain
• warmth
• air - primarily oxygen
• water - too little and we die, too much and we drown or are at least cold & miserable
• an energy source - carbohydrate
• a protein (nitrogen) source
• other minerals in varying quantities
Does this list look familiar?
Ingredients
The secret behind successful composting is to use the right mix of materials and provide a suitable environment for the composting microbes to live in. Warmth, moisture and air are all very important.
The correct mix of raw materials is one in which 'greens' are mixed with more fibrous ‘browns’ at the rate of four parts (by volume) of ‘greens’ to one of ‘browns’. Too many greens, especially grass clippings can lead to a smelly, slimy mess which will take a year to compost.
Beware - do not put cooked food scraps or meat or cat and dog faeces into the compost heap. They will compost but they may attract vermin (eg rats) or possibly lead to a risk of disease.
Other pet manures such as from rabbits, hamsters, guinea pigs, gerbils are excellent compost materials, but not cat and dog faeces.
If you intend to use large quantities of grass clippings for compost, then make sure they are well mixed with 'brown' materials such as straw, and that the heap is turned regularly.
Unless you can be sure of a hot composting process it is better not to put the roots of perennial weeds such as couch grass (scutch) into a compost bin.
Newspaper and cardboard can be composted in small quantities as long as they are well mixed with 'greens'.
Compost activators and additives
A small amount of soil mixed into the heap will add soil microbes and contribute to the composting. Mature compost or well-rotted manure also acts as an activator by 'seeding' the new heap with the right microbes.
A sprinkling of lime mixed in will help to keep the heap 'sweet' by stopping the heap getting too acidic. High acidity slows down the composting process.
Seaweed is an excellent compost ingredient, mainly contributing trace elements and minerals.
Not for the squeamish - urine is a good compost activator and a lot cheaper than buying compost activators from the garden centre. It contains nitrogen.
Activators are added to compost bins to 'activate' the compost and get it going quickly. They are normally materials rich in nitrogen such as comfrey leaves, grass clippings, poultry manure, urine, young weeds, nettle tops.
Composting process
Once composting starts, the temperature in the bin rises very rapidly to 60-70°C. Turn the mixture with a fork after about two weeks to get more air into the material and keep the heating going.
It is this heating process which kills weed seeds, disease organisms and perennial weeds.
It might need turning again a few weeks later. It will then slowly cool down, and as it does so the materials will become progressively unrecognisable for what they originally were. As the compost finally matures, manure worms and other creatures will move into the compost.
Once the compost looks, feels and smells like soil it is ready to use. Generally speaking, the longer the temperature stays high, the shorter time will be needed for composting to reach completion.
Making the compost
BIG IS BEAUTIFUL
The bigger the volume you can start composting at one go the easier and quicker the process will be. Collect ‘browns’ in advance and then mix with the ‘greens’ to fill the compost bin. Add water if required so that the mixture is like a damp sponge, and cover.
Alternatively, though the overall process will be slower, layer ‘greens’ and ‘browns’ as they become available.
Shredding is useful for woody materials (browns) as the microbes have a bigger surface area to work on. It also allows you to compost tougher materials than you might normally do.
Compost containers
What about a compost bin? For small gardens you can buy nice plastic or wooden bins, but a cheaper alternative is a plastic dustbin. Drill holes around the bottom to let air in. For large gardens which produce a lot of compostable material, sheep wire around four fencing posts in a square, and lined inside with polythene or cardboard, makes a cheap, though not particularly attractive, bin. Whichever type you use put a six-inch layer of sticks at the bottom to help provide aeration.
Good insulation and some form of roof or cover will keep the heat in and the water out. A range of commercial compost bins are available. Some of them may be difficult to use due to their small size - ie they don't hold enough material to heat up properly. They can be quite expensive, though they can be more attractive than some home-made bins.
Compost tumblers may also suffer from small volume problems, though they do give good aeration of the composting material. Very large tumblers will be heavy to turn.
Wooden bins can be home-made to a suitable size and can incorporate ventilation holes. These should not be so large that they let too much heat out as they let air in. A slatted removable front makes removal of the finished compost easy.A large compost bin can be made from old, but sound, wooden pallets. They may need to have the large gaps between planks filled with planks from other pallets to prevent heat loss. The resulting double wall gives good insulation.
Compost bins made of mortared building bricks or blocks are obviously more permanent. They have good insulation properties.
Straw bales can be made into a temporary compost bin - temporary in that it will last one year before rotting. It can then itself be mixed with fresh material in another bin - a compostable compost bin! The bales are laid in a square or rectangle arranged like brickwork, and then covered with a polythene cover.
Siting
Depending on the construction, a compost bin may not be the most attractive of garden features. Generally, site it well away from the house since at times it may give off its own distinctive smell!
Using compost
Garden compost can be used in the same way as well rotted farm yard manure as a basic nutrient and organic matter provider. Compost also makes a top class feeding mulch for all plants.
If you have only small quantities then it is probably best used for making your own organic seed or potting mixture.
Nutrient content of compost
Well-made garden compost has a similar nutrient composition to well rotted farm yard manure.
Anaerobic composting
The normal idea of composting is a process which heats up, requiring air for the microbes. However, compost can be made in the relative absence of air, though it will take up to a year to complete, and the material will often be wet and heavy. It may often have a 'sour' smell at times.
In anaerobic composting a different set of microbes break the fresh material down, at a much slower rate. This often happens naturally when a large mass of grass clippings put into the compost bin heat up for a short while but then compress down sealing the air out of the material. You may also find layers of grass which are yellow-green and have not broken down at all. When this happens you have preserved the grass by making a layer of silage. Breaking this up and letting the air in will start composting.
It is good policy to turn an anaerobic heap in mid-late winter to get air in and complete the composting. Beware - it is very heavy to turn when wet. After turning it keeps rain out to allow it to dry out before use.
Sheet composting
Fresh organic materials can be put into layers on the surface of the soil over the winter. You might cover it with polythene.
The material will break down slowly, but nutrients may be washed out, and it may also attract vermin. Slugs may also breed underneath it and birds may spread it all over the place.
Trench composting
Trench composting is an old technique in which a trench is progressively filled with material for composting and covered with soil as the trench is filled. It can be useful for preparing a high organic matter site for hungry crops such as runner beans.
Disease free semi-hard materials such as Brussels Sprout stumps can be put in the bottom where they will break down over a couple of years.
Worm composting
Worm composting uses brandling or 'manure' worms to break down normally smallish quantities of kitchen waste in a specially prepared 'worm bin'.
It can be done on a large scale, but requires large quantities of the correct mix of materials and a suitable covered site.
The compost (worm casts) from the process make excellent solid plant feed or a nutrient source for seed or potting mixtures, and the drainage liquid makes good liquid feed.
Leaf mould
Leaves break down slowly into a nutrient-poor leaf mould. Well broken down and sieved, it makes a good peat substitute in seed composts. A suitable bin can be made from four posts and wire netting. No insulation is needed, but a cover is needed to prevent the leaves blowing away.
Note: a lot of leaves make only a little leaf mould.
Hot beds
Victorian gardeners used hot beds for growing early crops, either outside or in a greenhouse.
In essence a hot bed is a large stack of fresh, strawy horse or farmyard manure which is layered with and covered with soil. A cold frame is placed on top for growing the crops in.
As the manure composts it gives off heat which keeps the frame on top warm. It also provides nutrients for the growing crops.
The hot bed will slowly shrink and sink as it matures, and once cropping has finished the resulting 'compost' can be used like normal compost.
It’s a long process, so if you need some help for maintaining your garden, hire a professional company like Portland TT.
Vegetable Garden - Prepare for Bulb Planting
While most gardeners are busy preparing to plant flower bulbs at this time of the year, don’t forget that it’s bulb planting time in the vegetable garden too. Garlic, potato onions, and “walking” onions can all be planted at the same time your tulips and daffodils go in. Like flower bulbs, garlic & onion bulbs need to be planted in soil that is well amended and prepared.
What are these bulbs?
Most of us have heard of garlic but if you’ve only ever tasted garlic from the supermarket, you’re in for a real treat growing your own. First, you’ll soon realize that there are dozens of varieties of garlic ranging from hot & spicy Rocambole types to the giant, mildly flavoured elephant garlic. Rocambole types do especially well when fall planted, giving them enough time to develop that flavourful zing.
A bit more unusual, potato onions are thought to have been a staple for pioneers on their journey westward. More like shallots, these onions will multiply below ground from a single bulb. A papery covering envelops the entire bulb cluster. Both the bulbs and the greens are edible and are usually ready to harvest before regular onions and store very well. One potato onion will usually multiply to 8 in one season. No wonder they were once so prized that they were given away as wedding presents! Yellow potato onions are probably the easiest variety to grow if you want to just try them. For the more daring, potato onions come in white & red.
Lastly, “walking” or “topsetting” onions work well both in the vegetable or ornamental garden. Instead of forming below ground, these plants set bulbils at the top of their stems. As the bulbils fatten up, their weight causes the stems to bend over. Once they come into contact with soil, the bulbils will sprout. Thus, you get onions “walking” around your garden. Varieties include Egyptian and Catawissa.
Where to plant?
Instead of tucking these bulbs into spots under trees or in pots like you would flower bulbs, garlic and onion bulbs need to be planted in full sun & fairly rich soil. Even though they will grow in partly shady areas, the size of your harvest will indeed by affected if they’re given less than optimum conditions.
If you’re planning to actively harvest bulbs for food, you’ll want to ensure that you provide a balance of nutrients for the long growing season. The application of compost, well-aged manure, and bonemeal or rock phosphate will provide a source of slow-release nutrients. Fertilizers too high in nitrogen, especially, are to be avoided so that frost tender-foliage isn’t stimulated to develop. Also, if you live in an area that gets a large amount of rain during the winter the nutrients in slow-release fertilizers are less likely to leach away.
Drainage is also an important factor when deciding where to plant your vegetable bulbs. Any water sitting through the winter will cause your onion & garlic bulbs to rot. Choose a well-drained site or else mound your soil if you don’t have raised beds.
Bonemeal – pros & cons
Bonemeal is a by-product of the cattle industry and is an organic source of slow-release phosphorus– a nutrient that’s especially important for root & bulb formation. However, there are fears from the UK that bonemeal may transmit the prion that causes the human form of Mad Cow Disease. Because it is so dusty, the meal can easily be inhaled which is a possible route of infection. While there haven’t been any reports of Mad Cow Disease in the UK, bonemeal itself is a commodity sold on the world market. The bonemeal sold here in Canada, for instance, may not have come from cattle raised here. The other organic alternative to bonemeal is rock phosphate, a mineral-based product.
If you do decide to use bonemeal, do wear a dust mask or cloth over your mouth and nose to prevent inhalation.
If you need help in regular maintenance of your vegetable garden, don’t hesitate to contact Portland TT.