Edition Thirty -
September 2008

Summer hasn't been too kind to us in the UK but the countryside
looks lush with all the rain we've had, and there has been a bumper crop
from the vegetable garden..
There is a misconception that vegetables can only be grown for summer
consumption, but we have laid out a winter supply of swede, leeks,
onions carrots, sprouts and parsnips, together with potatoes of course..
We've also filled our freezers with soft fruit such as blackcurrants,
raspberries, gooseberries, rhubarb and blackberries.. Come the cold
months we can literally enjoy the fruits of our labour..
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I found a little book recently called 'The Accidental
Gardener's Almanac' which I loved so much I wrote to the
Publishers asking for, and receiving permission to quote parts of it for
you, from time to time..
The book would make a wonderful Christmas or birthday present for your
gardening friends or relations..
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September:
September
brings the ripening fruit
And windfalls from the boughs are blown
Now every garden doth transmute
Except for your
disaster zone..
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Reproduced with kind permission of
www.summersdale.com |
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Jobs for the month - September
Houseplants
Houseplants
that have spent the summer outside should now come in, before you have
to start heating your home. This gives them a chance to adjust. Wash
them thoroughly before bringing them in to rid them of any pests and
eggs they might have attracted.
Bulbs.
The shops and garden centres are full of
spring bulbs now.. Plant them as long as the ground is workable. Tulips
are the last bulbs you can plant, up to the end of December..
Lawns
The warm and wet summer has meant that not
only is grass green and lush, but many of you will have fairy rings
appearing on your lawn.. I had the same problem and eliminated them by
first deep forking the area, then liberally soaking it with diluted
fairy liquid water (as in the washing up water) two or three times a
week...
Greenhouse
When all the crops are finished, clean out the
greenhouse thoroughly. I usually recommend sterilisation or fumigation
in the spring, before starting the new season crops.. But while the
greenhouse is empty, check it out for repair and maintenance jobs, or a
coat of paint if it is wooden.
Hedges
You should make the final cut or light trim by
now. There will be no new growth to hedges such as privet after
September..

Fruit
and veg
September is a busy month, when you reap the
rewards of your labour.. Harvest your crops of fruit and vegetables on a
warm, dry day (if you can find one!) and store them in a cool dry place,
or according to your gardening book instructions.. Take the opportunity
to check fruit trees and bushes for signs of disease and treat
accordingly.
Flowers for cutting
Keep cutting flowers for the house, to
encourage further late blooms. Those annual plants that have finished,
such as sweet peas, can be pulled out and put on the compost heap.
Herbaceous plants
All perennial plants that have now finished
flowering can either be cut down or left until the spring. I prefer to
cut them down as it makes for a tidy winter garden, but foliage, whether
it be dead or alive, helps keep the garden warmer over winter, so it
can be left if you can bear the unsightliness of it.
Ponds and water features
Clean up aquatic plants
that are starting to die back, taking care not to disturb any frogs or
fish fry that might be tangled up in them.
Clean water features of algae
and switch off the electricity and water for the winter months, if you
have finished in the garden for the season. Some people like to cover
their concrete water features with polythene to prevent frost damage..
Wildlife

It's time to start feeding the birds once
more, and taking note of any other wildlife that enters your garden: you
might have more mouths to feed than you thought! This year I grew large
Sunflowers, the heads of which I shall hang from a tree outside my
kitchen window for the birds to feed on over winter.. A squirrel has
already found and eaten one of the smaller ones in the garden, so the
birds will have some competition
If you like birds,
here is the website for
you...
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