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Hollyhocks
Hollyhocks in the summer border

In your ornamental garden in July 2010

The lushness of spring growth may be over, and many plants may have already passed their peak. Now is a good time to have  a  tidy up. Deadheading and cutting back spent flowering shoots may encourage a second flush of flowering; or leave seed heads to develop for the birds, and seed saving.Try to take time out  to  sit back and enjoy your garden and all that hard work you have put in.

Take a regular stroll around the garden and look out for signs of pest and disease. Where necessary, take action before these become a problem.

Relax in your deckchair, put your feet up and listen to the birds singing and the insects buzzing. Remember to put your sun-block on when you are working outdoors.

General tasks

Water and watering

If the weather stays dry, and hosepipes are banned, you may need to prioritise what you do, and don’t, water. Concentrate on containers, baskets, annuals and new plantings. Don’t waste water on shrubs and trees, or the lawn.

 

Greenhouse

Summer lawn care

Pond management

What to plant in July

Making new plants

For detailed information on taking cuttings, consult a good gardening book. Two

Beautiful penstemons
Beautiful penstemons
White and pink flowers of Penstemon 'Apple Blossom'
Penstemon 'Apple Blossom'

Penstemon 'Andenken an Friedrich Hahn'

Pest watch

Ladybird larvae
Ladybird larvae
eat aphids

July can be  a busy month for pests, but fortunately the beneficial insects, such as hoverfly larvae, ladybirds and many others, should also be present in large numbers to deal with them.

Disease watch

Blotched rose leaf showing the effects of Rose blackspot
Rose blackspot

At this time of year, leaf blotches, caused by fungal diseases, may appear overnight on previously perfect plants.

Powdery mildew, rusts and blackspot are common examples. The temperature/moisture combination is just right for their spores to germinate. Alarmingly - leaf blotches appear overnight on previously perfect plants.

Don't panic. These are rarely killer diseases - they just disfigure. Some years are worse than others. Good horticulture is the key to control and management.

Powdery mildew is often a problem when plants are under stress, due to poor growth conditions. Plants growing by fences and walls invariably suffer dryness at the roots. Keep all wall/fence trained plants well watered - and mulch to retain moisture.

See our factsheets on Rose blackspot and Powdery mildew
(Online access to factsheets requires members' password. Find out about Garden Organic membership here.)

See also our technical notes on organic rose growing (PDF 575Kb)

back to - What to do in the garden now

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