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Spring tasks to get your garden growing

by Tricia

It’s been a long winter

Many of us in the North experienced one of the snowiest winters that we’ve had in years. Cool temperatures are continuing even though it’s already officially spring. I’d say that this year we’re probably going to be two or three weeks behind on our normal Spring gardening tasks.

Normally the snow is gone, or just about gone, by this time in March. In fact I usually have crocus’ and snowdrops blooming by now. However, if you experienced the same winter I did your garden is likely still buried under snow!

Still … it’s time to think about Spring gardening tasks.

I’m sure some of you have already started cleaning up your garden and preparing for the season ahead. Those of us that are still unable to get out into the garden, well … we can at least make sure that our gardening tools are in order, oil and sharpen our pruners and purchase any supplies that we need so that we’ll be able to catch up once the snow finally melts!

Spring Tasks

  • As I stated above, this is a great time of year to maintain your gardening tools by cleaning, sharpening and oil pruners, having your lawnmower blades sharpened, buying new gardening gloves and any other items that you might need throughout the coming months.
  • Once the grass is no longer wet and the soil in your garden beds dries out begin your outdoor tasks by raking the lawn to get rid of leaves, twigs and other debris that has accumulated in your yard thanks to winter winds.
  • Rake the dead growth from your lawn.
  • If you have damaged or bare patches on your lawn purchase some grass seed and re-seed those areas. Be sure to scratch the soil with a rake first and then apply grass seed to the area. Lightly cover the seed with a thin layer of soil and be sure to keep the area well watered until the seeds germinate and new grass begins to appear.
  • If you protected your shrubs, trees or any garden plants over winter it’s time to remove the winter protect. As the air warms it’s very important that your shrubs and trees have good air circulation around them. Leaving burlap or other forms of winter protect on too long can lead to bark rot.
  • This is also a great time of year to plant new trees, shrub, roses and other hardy dormant plants. Also if you have any trees or shrubs that you’d like to transplant elsewhere in your yard do it before they begin to leaf out.
  • Many trees and shrubs benefit from a spray of dormant oil as this helps to control scale insects and other overwintering pests. Euonymus, magnolias, crabapples and other fruit trees should be sprayed when their buds are in swell.
  • Take a good look at your garden beds and if you notice that any of your plants have come up out of the earth to the freeze and thaw cycles at this time of year. Replant any heave-ho victims as soon as possible. Most will recover nicely if you find them and replant while it’s still cool.
  • Wait until temperatures are reliably warm before you begin to remove mulch and cut back plants such as roses, evergreen plants and shrubs. You can cut off obviously dead branches but don’t cut into live branches until there’s no chance of frost or a return of cold weather. If you aren’t sure what to cut then just wait until it’s a little warmer and your plant is showing obvious signs of growth. Once you do feel it’s time to prune it’s best to prune plants such as roses before they leaf out.
  • Clear your garden of the previous seasons dead plant material such as dead leaves and other debris as they can harbor molds and overwintering pests.
  • Ornamental grasses can be cut back at this time as well.
  • Don’t overwork your garden beds by digging too early. The soil structure is delicate and if you dig in it while it’s still wet you can damage it’s composition. Soil should fall apart when you pick up a handful. If it sticks together in a clump wait until it dries out a bit more.
  • Once the soil has dried out you can begin to dig garden beds, add manure, compost and prepare for the planting of new perennials, annuals and vegetables.
  • Weeds will likely be some of the first green growth you see in your garden. Pluck them out now while they are still young and their roots are shallow. It will mean less work for you later on!
  • Don’t forget to care for your houseplants. The winter months can be hard on house plants as the air is often dry inside the house due to forced air heating. The light levels have also been lower too. Perhaps take a few moments to pick off any dead leaves, top up their soil and lightly fertilize your houseplants so they too will have a great spring start.

Happy Gardening!






Filed Under: Garden Maintenance, Garden Tips, Garden Tools, Home and Lifestyle, House Plants, In The Garden, Lawn Care, Organic, Spring Tasks Tagged With: air circulation, annual, Annuals, Beds, bloom, blooming, branch, bud, bud swell, buds, burlap, clump, cold, cold weather, composition, compost, crocus, cut back, dead leaves, debris, delicate, dig, dormant oil, dry soil, fertilize, Fruit, garden, garden bed, garden beds, garden care, Garden Tools, gardening, germinate, get ready, grasses, green, grow, growth, hardy, heaved plants, House, House Plants, Houseplants, insect, lawn, Lawn Care, lawn mower blades, leaves, light, maintain, manure, melting snow, mulch, oil, outdoor, overwinter, perennial, Perennials, pests, plant, plant material, planting, plants, prepare, prepare soil, prune, pruning, purchase, rake, rake lawn, remove, replant, reseed, roots, rose, roses, scale, seeds, sharpen, shrub, shrubs, snow, spray, spring, temperature, transplant, tree, trees, vegetables, warm, water, weed, weeding, winter, winter protection

Create lists of plants you’ve grown or garden to do lists on Meosphere

by Tricia

I just joined an interesting site called Meosphere. The site is a collection of lists, and links that site members have created. Each member can create their own Meosphere.

As the sites about page says we all have our Meosphere. You could even say this blog has it’s own meosphere, a gardening meosphere perhaps.

The best way to explain this site to you is to show you.

I went looking for gardening related items and I found a Meosphere list had had already been started. It’s called “Flowers You’ve grown”. I went through the list and ticked off all the flowers on the list that I’ve grown at some point in my life or that are currently growing in my garden. Then I saved a list of the flowers I’ve grown as my own list. I can’t find an embed list link for my own list though so I’ll just paste the first list here to show you:

Now we all know that even more flowers could be added to that list but that’s the beauty of the meosphere lists. You can place a check mark beside all the flowers on this list that you grow and save your own copy of the list. Then you can add even more flowers to it if you’d like. You can even edit your saved list to add descriptions and photos of each item.

Can you see the possibilities?

I think I may spend a bit of time on Meosphere later today. I might create some gardening to do lists. You know, specific spring, summer, and autumn gardening tasks for Zone 5b gardeners. Others on the site can find my lists and make their own copies adding tasks specific to their own gardening zones. You could also make lists of your gardening books, favorite garden tools, and so on. I love it.

You could make lists of just about anything in this manner and since we’re bloggers it could be yet another way to interact with our readers.

Please do feel free to check off the flowers that you grow on this list and make your own list out of it. I’d love to visit your meospheres to see what you’ve created and see lists of what you’ve been growing.

Filed Under: Garden Buzz, Garden Tips, Great Sites, Home and Lifestyle, Recreation, Services, Web and Technology Tagged With: add to list, autumn, autumn task list, blog, book, Favorite, favorite garden book list, flower, flowers, flowers Ive grown, flowers youve grown, garden, Garden Tools, gardener, gardening, gardening books, grow, growing, interactive, items, join, Links, lists, Meosphere, meosphere.com, my garden, photos, post, share, share list, spring, spring task list, summer, summer task list, to do lists, vegetable lists, vegetables

Ergonomic gardening tools – protect your hands and wrists

by Tricia

A while back I wrote about my favorite “can’t live without them” gardening tools and accessories. On that list were pruners, scissors, garden ribbon or ties, stakes – wooden and bamboo, a hand trowel and a hand cultivator.

Naturally, there are many other tools that I use in the garden from time to time, but those listed above are the ones that I use almost every time I step into the garden to do some work.

The design of each tool, and how it feels in my hand as I work with it is very important. Even if I’m only using a tool for a matter of minutes it needs to feel comfortable in my hands and be easy to use. Even a few minutes use each day can add up to hours or even days worth of use by the time the gardening season ends each year and no one would want to work with a tool that they were uncomfortable with for that long.

Now I have bad knees and they bother me from time to time, which I suppose is one of the reasons why I set up my garden with raised beds. I don’t have to bend my knees as much when I’m working, and I can sit on the stones surrounding the garden beds as I work and give my knees a break.

I don’t have bad wrists or arthritis in my hands, but many people who enjoy gardening do have these disorders. Whether they come from carpal tunnel syndrome, injury or an inflammatory condition such as arthritis I can only imagine how much more important the design of the garden tools is to these people.

Even though I don’t suffer from any of these conditions it still might be a good idea to use tools that have been ergonomically designed in order to prevent conditions like carpal tunnel or injury from occurring.

I spend so many hours in the garden that it only makes sense to use well designed tools doesn’t it?

Within a months time I’ll be out in the garden again on a regular basis. Tidying up the garden and performing spring garden maintenance. Perhaps this is the right time to be looking for new tools for the garden so that I’ll be ready when the temperatures warm up and the plants begin to come out of dormancy.

I spent some time over the weekend looking at the many garden related products at OnlineDiscountMart.com. Did you know that they sell ergonomic gardening tools such as hand trowels and hand cultivators?

handgardentrowel.gif I really like the design of their hand garden trowel.

This ergonomic hand garden trowel has been engineered to save and protect your wrists from working in the garden for many hours each day. The design moves the workload from the wrist to the forearm. I think this is a great design for those with repetitive wrist injury disorders, or for those who tend to work in their garden on a regular basis in order to prevent such injuries.

The large adjustable handle would also be easy to grip which I would imagine would lessen the strain and pain for those with arthritis in their hands.

The handle can be adjusted for comfortable use, and locked into position as well. This ergonomic hand trowel also features a flexible pad for your forearm which would help make this tool comfortable to use.

I really think that anyone who loves to garden could use a hand trowel such as this. It’s well designed and made of durable steel giving it a long lifespan. This 19 inch long tool normally sells for $19.95 but right now Online Discount Mart is selling it for $14.95.

handgardencultivator.gif This hand garden cultivator is another one of the ergonomic gardening tools that Online Discount Mart sells.

It’s on sale for only $14.95 right now as well, and just like the ergonomic hand garden trowel, the ergonomic hand garden cultivator has been designed to move the workload from the wrist to the forearm. The hand cultivator also features an adjustable and lockable handle, plus a flexible pad for your forearm. The hand cultivator is 19″ in length and each prong on the cultivator is 3″ in length.

I like the fact that both of these tools are made of durable steel. I’ve gardened with my family since I was a child, but I’ve only been gardening on my own for the last five years and I’m amazed at how many poorly made tools I’ve gone through in that time. Ones that have bent or snapped when I’m digging in my sometimes dry hard clay soil. Considering that these tools are made of steel I would imagine that they would withstand the work I’d put them through in my garden.

I’d love to purchase both of these items and try them out. The price is certainly right. I also just noticed that they have a Winter coupon special allowing you to get an extra 5% off the price of both of these tools. That makes this already good price even better.

If you’re looking for well made ergonomic gardening tools, or other items for the garden or the great outdoors do take a look at OnlineDiscountMart.com.

Filed Under: Garden Maintenance, Garden Tools, Health and Fitness, In The Garden Tagged With: Garden Maintenance, Garden Tools, Health and Fitness, In The Garden


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