
Here’s MY version of How to Get Your Garden Ready for Spring, the very important subject that so many garden writers and speakers are opining on this time of year. It’s my March column for the alternative paper I write for.
Here’s what most homeowners do. They wait until it’s already warm and colorful outdoors before noticing that their yards look like crap and wondering what they can do to change that sad fact. And what’s even sadder is that by then, usually late April or May, they’ve already missed the best time to get their gardens ready for the season, so here’s what you should be doing in March, okay? Early April at the absolute latest! (Late February would have been even better, so remember than next year.)
CLEAN-UP
Now there’s lots of controversy (who knew?) about whether it’s best to remove leaves from beds and borders in the fall or leave them there until spring, with some sources even recommending raking all your leaves into your beds for the winter. Here’s what I say: it depends. Some leaves are large enough to form a crust that keeps water from getting to the soil, especially in quantity. So in yards with lots of oaks I suggest chopping them first (using a mulching mower or shredder/chopper), which turns them into a dandy mulch for your borders. I’ve tried that myself and find it way too time-consuming, given the quantity of leaves on my property, so I gather and compost most leaves in the fall, then do final clean-up in late winter or early spring. That means now, if you haven’t done it already.
Basic spring clean-up means:
- Removing all the leaves. Even if you did this in the fall, more have probably blown your way.
- Cutting off the ratty- looking foliage of perennials that are aboveground.
- Digging out all the weeds you can see.
- Cutting back vines that are where you don’t want them.
- Cutting back ornamental grasses, including liriope, and the dead stems of perennials if you left them up for the winter (which is a good idea, for wildlife) to a few inches high.
- Using a cultivator or gloved hand to loosen the mulch, acorns and other dried plant matter covering the ground around your shrubs and perennials. This allows water and air to more easily penetrate to the roots.
Why do all that now, so early? Because if you have spring-blooming bulbs or perennials that emerge early in your borders, they could be trampled on if this clean-up is done after they’ve emerged.. Or worse, if you wait til your garden has started producing masses of new growth, you won’t be able to see those weeds and out-of-control vines. Weeding now will reduce your weeding burden throughout the entire season.
MULCH
Applying organic mulch on top of your garden is the single most important thing you can do for your garden every year, bar none. That’s because it prevents weeds, regulates soil temperature, and retains moisture. Plus, as it decomposes over the course of the season and is carried underground by earthworms and other creatures of the soil, it improves soil structure, which means better drainage and better use of nutrients. In my garden organic mulch is the only form of fertilizer I use, though most gardens and all new ones benefit from a one-inch application of compost in the spring, also. (Certain plants – edibles, annuals, and anything in pots – still need fertilizer no matter what). And as mulches go, nothing’s better than good old Takoma Park leafmold mulch because it decomposes over the course of one season, which is a good thing because it improves your soil. The more attractive mulches like bark and hardwood chips aren’t as helpful because they last a long time, which is a bad thing. Like weeding and leaf removal, mulching is a job that’s easier to do before new bulbs and perennials have emerged, especially if they’ve just popped up and are hard to see.
GOT PLACES TO STEP?
One frequently heard caveat about spring work in the garden is that if you tromp all over your beds and borders when the ground is super-saturated from spring rains, you’ll cause soil compaction, a very bad thing for the future health of your plants. So providing places to step in the garden is essential if you want to, for example, pull weeds when it’s easy to do because the soil is so wet. So this month when you’re cleaning out those borders why not strategically place small fieldstones or pavers where your feet need to be placed in order to reach your plants. This one-time chore will help you stay in control of your garden (by weeding and pruning back as needed) throughout the season. Without safe places to step, it’s best to test the soil before walking on it by grabbing a handful of soil and firming it into a ball, then dropping it. If it stays in a ball, the soil is too wet to dig in or walk on. If it crumbles, it’s okay to walk on.
LAWN CARE
Another area of disagreement is whether or not to feed your lawn in the spring. Many sources recommend against spring feeding because it encourages top growth at the expense of root growth, promotes weeds, leads to extra mowing and, with spring rains, causes nutrient run-off into our waterways. Yet some experts in organic gardening say it’s only synthetic or fast-acting fertilizers that cause water pollution, not organic, slow-release fertilizers like Lawn Restore or Safer. So if you forgot to feed your lawn last fall and it really needs it, go ahead but give our rivers a break and use an organic one.
If your lawn is sunny and has a history of crabgrass, corn gluten is an effective organic preemergent weed killer, applied when the forsythia are blooming (or, according to other experts, when forsythia blooms are dropping). As an added bonus, corn gluten contains a small amount of nitrogen (10 percent by weight), so it helps to "green-up" your lawn in a safe, organic way. Remember to always follow the instructions.
Fall is the best time of year for planting grass seed but bare spots can be seeded in March, which gives them time to germinate and get established before it gets hot.. Just don’t seed at the same time you’re applying fertilizer or corn gluten.
PRUNING
Late March/early April is a great time to prune trees and shrubs that have dropped their leaves because you can see what you’re doing. Also, because they’re dormant, they won’t respond by sprouting new growth that could be killed by cold spells.
-Remove broken branches. Bleeding sap doesn’t hurt them, so don’t worry about it.
-Remove bagworm bags now. Destroy them or throw them away; don’t just leave them on the ground.
– March is a good time to prune butterfly bushes, spireas, caryopteris, forsythias and crape myrtles – if needed or desired. The detailed how-to’s won’t fit in this column, so just Google "prune" and the name of the shrub type to find out whether yours really needs pruning and if so, how to do it.
NEW PLANTS
Buy and plant shrubs and perennials as soon as they’re available in the garden centers – the sooner the better. It gives them more time to get their roots established before the heat which is much more of a killer than winter cold. Be careful not to disturb still-dormant perennials, though, so if you’re not sure where things are, wait.
BULB CARE AND DESIGN
Make notes now about where you want to plant bulbs next fall. Draw little diagrams to guide you. Otherwise there’s no way you’ll know where to plant them when the time comes.
Okay, now get out there and get your hands dirty!
Extras for this online version: links to lots more information about mulch, and lawn care.







{ 4 comments }
This is terrific information and very timely. I have long heard about Montgomery County’s mulch program but I live in DC. Can you recommend a good source for mulch?
Thanks,
Denise
Denise, here’s the DC Urban Gardener article on the subject, with the source information we have right now:
http://www.dc-urban-gardeners.com/Mulch1.html
The dates don’t quite work up here in Western Massachusetts (we still have a foot of snow and ice on the ground, but I appreciate the heads up and the reminder that you can hardly start too early. Thanks.
I own a small landscape company in Cleveland , Ohio. We leave our leaves in the beds and plant foliage (bulbs)that peirce through the leaf cover. We also mulch over the leaves to hold them in place. We only remove leaves from walks and lawns. If we make new beds we use leaves to smother the soil. Just think of nature. Are there a bunch of garden elves with pack blowers out in the natural settings?
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