Fenland Resident – Spring 2019

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April/May 2019 45

If you have a garden question send to @tobybuckland via Twitter

WHAT TO
DO NOW
Encourage the lawn to
thicken by giving the grass
its first cut with the blades
on the mowers set high. Dig
up and divide congested
clumps of perennial flowers


  • the ideal time is when
    they’re just starting into
    growth as the emerging
    shoots quickly repair and
    it’s easy to spot areas of
    dead, spent root. Use a
    spade to dig up the whole
    clump and two back-to-
    back garden forks as levers
    to tear clumps into saucer-
    sized portions. Re-plant,
    adding fresh compost and
    watering in the roots.
    Start indoor sowing
    in pots concentrating
    on vegetables like
    greenhouse tomatoes
    and chillies that require a
    long season to give their
    best. Hardy annuals can
    be sown directly outside
    in beds including lettuce,
    radish and peas, plus
    flowers for cutting such as
    calendula, cornflowers
    and larkspur.
    It’s also time to buy and
    start off tubers and roots
    including canna lilies and
    dahlias. Pot up into fresh
    compost in 2l containers.
    For a crop of home-grown
    onions plant sets in rows
    in your best, sunniest soil.
    Plant with the ‘noses’ just
    showing above the soil
    and cover with sticks until
    they grow. Plant early
    potatoes in large tubs or
    into trenches lined with
    manure/compost.


Put the ‘zing in spring’ with
the acid yellow blooms of
Euphorbia wulfennii. What
makes this spurge such a
winner is its easy-going nature:
it thrives in poor gravelly soils
in both sun and part day
shade, while its steely-blue
evergreen whorls of leaves
are a year-round architectural

feature. The flowers make an
ideal backdrop for spring bulbs
and, once over, cut the spent
blooms down to the ground
leaving the new to flower next
spring. Like all euphorbias the
sap can irritate skin so position
away from path edges and
wear gloves and long sleeves
when pruning.

PLANT OF THE MONTH:


Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii


IF YOU DO JUST ONE THING...
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3 ways to


re-use plastic


in the garden



  1. Turn bottles
    into cloches
    Discarded plastic drink bottles
    also make great cloches,
    which act as mini-greenhouses
    to protect tender plants from
    the cold and deter pests such
    as rabbits, and even urban
    deer, from nibbling at young
    seedlings. Simply cut the top off
    the bottle and place over the
    plant.

  2. Reuse pots
    Plants bought from garden
    centres are often supplied
    in plastic pots, although
    alternative materials such as
    coir, paper or bamboo are
    increasingly available. Consider
    re-using these for seed sowing
    and re-potting, rather than
    buying new. Just rinse out with
    warm water and detergent
    before using again, to kill off
    any diseases.

  3. Pass things on
    Think about setting up a plant
    pot recycling point on an
    allotment of other community
    hub, where gardeners and
    schools can drop off any
    unwanted pots for others to pick
    up and recycle.


PHOTO: THINKSTOCK/PA

PHOTO: NEIL HEPWORTH/RHS/PA

PHOTO: WICOR PRIMARY SCHOOL/PA
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