Tuesday, April 22, 2014


FLOWER GARDENER'S DIARY - APRIL

3 people recommend this
Make the most of the autumn plant sales, most garden centres have a massive sale at this time of year to make way for new season's plants.
Autumn is nature's planting time as the soils are warm and moist. Plants have the winter to settle their roots into the soil ready to bloom beautifully in the spring.

PICK:

  • Scabious, Peruvian lily, poppies, marguerite daisy, statice, Japanese anemones, roses, coreopsis, echinacea, strawflowers, dahlias, lilies, sweet peas, gypsophila, cosmos, zinnia, pineapple lily, agapanthus, hydrangeas.

SOW:

  • Bellis, polyanthus, violas, primula, pansies, flowering kale, poppies, wildflowers, gazania, dianthus.

PLANT:

  • Bulbs: It's not too late to plant bulbs for spring flowering. Fertilise existing ones with Tui Bulb Food. Watch the Tui Time Bulb Growing Guide for more information.
  • Plant autumn hanging baskets with: bellis, lobelia, polyanthus, flowering kale, primula, violas, snapdragons, wildflowers, sweet william, cineraria.

JOBS TO DO:

  • Prune back summer flowering perennials and bulbs that have finished for the season, to tidy up garden borders and beds.
  • Lift and divide over-grown perennials.
  • Save and dry seeds of summer flowers for sowing in the spring.

NOURISH:

  • Apply Tui Bulb Food to bulbs already in the ground.
  • Apply a side dressing of Novatec to shrub borders and flower gardens.

PROTECT:

  • Add thick layers of Tui Mulch & Feed or Tui Pea Straw Mulch to garden beds and pots to conserve water, reduce weeds and add valuable nutrients back to the soil. Mulching also keeps your garden looking tidy and cared for!
  • Aphids and whitefly are all still moving about now, particularly if the weather is still very warm. Be vigilant and spray with Tui Insect Control for Flowers as soon as they appear and again a few days later to kill eggs that hatch.
  • Lay Quash every few weeks to keep slugs and snails at bay.

Monday, April 14, 2014

What to plant in April!


VEGETABLE GARDENER'S DIARY - APRIL

14 people recommend this
Tomatoes, capsicums and chillies will be coming to an end in cooler parts of the country, where the nights are beginning to draw in and the earliest frosts may start to appear. In warm regions, these crops will last another couple of months.
Replenish the soil with a new layer of compost, Tui Super Sheep Pellets andTui Vegetable Food.

SPECIAL ATTENTION

  • Beans - tie up floppy plants, and keep them well watered - they should keep producing for another month or so.
  • Brussels sprouts - stake taller plants to prevent them from falling over.
  • Carrots - thin rows of carrots to ensure the roots develop evenly.
  • Sweetcorn - pull out plants once they have finished, and add the stems to the compost heap.
  • Tomatoes - in cold areas, pull out plants and leave any green fruits on a windowsill to ripen in the sun (this may take a few weeks).

SOW

  • Broccoli, cabbages, cauliflowers, celery, lettuces, mesclun, radishes, rocket, spinach, silverbeet, coriander, parsley.

PLANT

  • Beetroot, broccoli, cabbages, cauliflowers, cavolo nero, celery, kale, silverbeet, spinach, spring onions, coriander, parsley, rosemary, sage, thyme.

FERTILISE

  • Feed established plants once a month with Seasol plant tonic.

SPRAY

HARVEST

  • Beans (all types except broad beans), beetroot, broccoli, cabbages, capsicums, carrots, cauliflowers, celery, chillies, courgettes, cucumbers, lettuces, marrows, peas, potatoes, sweetcorn, tomatoes.

What to plant in April!


VEGETABLE GARDENER'S DIARY - APRIL

14 people recommend this
Tomatoes, capsicums and chillies will be coming to an end in cooler parts of the country, where the nights are beginning to draw in and the earliest frosts may start to appear. In warm regions, these crops will last another couple of months.
Replenish the soil with a new layer of compost, Tui Super Sheep Pellets andTui Vegetable Food.

SPECIAL ATTENTION

  • Beans - tie up floppy plants, and keep them well watered - they should keep producing for another month or so.
  • Brussels sprouts - stake taller plants to prevent them from falling over.
  • Carrots - thin rows of carrots to ensure the roots develop evenly.
  • Sweetcorn - pull out plants once they have finished, and add the stems to the compost heap.
  • Tomatoes - in cold areas, pull out plants and leave any green fruits on a windowsill to ripen in the sun (this may take a few weeks).

SOW

  • Broccoli, cabbages, cauliflowers, celery, lettuces, mesclun, radishes, rocket, spinach, silverbeet, coriander, parsley.

PLANT

  • Beetroot, broccoli, cabbages, cauliflowers, cavolo nero, celery, kale, silverbeet, spinach, spring onions, coriander, parsley, rosemary, sage, thyme.

FERTILISE

  • Feed established plants once a month with Seasol plant tonic.

SPRAY

HARVEST

  • Beans (all types except broad beans), beetroot, broccoli, cabbages, capsicums, carrots, cauliflowers, celery, chillies, courgettes, cucumbers, lettuces, marrows, peas, potatoes, sweetcorn, tomatoes.

April!


FRUIT GARDENER'S DIARY - APRIL

3 people recommend this
Once the autumn rains arrive, while the soil is still warm, it’s another good time to plant fruit trees and plants. Planting in the autumn allows the fruits to establish their root systems over the winter in preparation for the following fruiting season.

PICK

Grapes, apples, Chilean guava, pears, rhubarb, walnuts, passion fruit, late peaches.

PLANT

  • Plant evergreen frost hardy fruits such as feijoa (see the feijoa growing guide here) and Chilean guavas.
  • Remove runners from strawberry plants and pot up into Tui Strawberry Mix ready for planting out in the winter.
  • Remember - fruit requires a position in full sun. Shelter from prevailing winds is preferable.

TASKS

Protect

Prune

  • Once nectarines, peaches and plums have finished fruiting prune to shape and to remove any dead or diseased branches.

Weeds

  • Keep orchards and the areas around fruit trees weed free.
  • Only use weed sprays that are non-residual near fruit trees.

Mulch

  • Add a layer of Tui Mulch & Feed around the base of fruit trees, to keep the soil warmer over the winter months and keep the area weed free.
  • As the mulch breaks down it adds nutrients to the soil as well.