JUNE IN
THE GARDEN
Sally's Garden in June
The garden featured this month is, as you can
see, a little unruly! An awful lot of the planting is by self seeding
giving a wonderful display of Foxgloves, Poppies,
Sisyrinchium and Wild Verbascum (Mullein). As a result, one is
never quite sure what is going to pop up where, but the surprise
is half of the pleasure!
This is the month when most of the gruelling preparation
is finished. You can look over your borders with satisfaction at
the planting and flowering of your very personal arrangements. Remember
to keep all newly planted perennials and bedding plants well watered.
This sounds a joke as I write this looking over our water-logged
garden which is gently steaming now the rain has ceased for a while.
Despite staking the borders a lot of the taller flowers have keeled
over with some even pulling out of the soil. These will need
re-staking and firming into the ground. Keep dead heading
flowers as and when necessary.
This is the time to sow biennials
for planting out in their final position in the autumn, unless
already done. I treat lupins as biennials and throw out the plants
once they get big and woody. Canterbury
bells look lovely so they are a nice plant to grow. Sow more
seed of anything that has succumbed to slugs and snails.I have
just sown more cucumbers, basil and coriander as some snails got
into the green house.
The hanging baskets can all go out now. The
bedding plants too. Tomatoes and cucurbits can be planted
outside. Why don’t you make a visit to the garden centre and see
what is being sold off cheaply? They won’t want to keep bedding
and basket plants much longer as they will have outgrown their
pots or trays.
In the vegetable garden the runner and ground
beans can be planted outside. Sow more salad crops, new fresh leaves
are tastier than tough ones. At the end of the month the first
early potatoes can be lifted. Not all at once but as needed. June
is strawberry time. Also time to put straw under the plants
and netting over them. Do look out for the blackbirds getting
caught in or under the net. Free them wearing leather gloves,
I often resort to cutting the net to release them. June is
time to thin out the fruit on apples, plums and pears. Wait
until after nature has shed some of the fruit for you though. Cherries
have been thinned by the wind and rain already.
The long grass can be cut down at the end of the
month. June the first is traditionally the day to trim your box
but only small ornamental trees or low hedges. No hedge cutting
until end of July to allow all the birds to complete the nesting
and fledging. Do
leave some nettles for the butterflies in a corner along with some
dead wood for beetles don’t be too tidy.
Most importantly sit in the garden and enjoy
it!

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