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Prepare now for the gardening season

THE COASTAL GARDENER:

September 08, 2007|By RON VANDERHOFF

Get ready!

The next three months are the most important and active time in our local gardens. Even though it has been hot and dry over the past couple of months, all of that is about to change.

You live in southern California, not Virginia or Illinois or even Oregon. Our gardening season is nearly upon us. Hurry, there’s no time to waste.

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Plan, design, remove, order, repair and prepare. The gardening season is about to begin in Orange County.

You may be used to planting in the spring — most people are. That is because, even in Southern California, you have been unknowingly subjected to a well-healed tradition of gardens revolving around spring. A tradition that is somewhat out of place here in southern California.

Over the next month or two, I and several other good local horticulturists, will try to remove the “spring is for planting” brainwashing to which you have been subjected. We will attempt to replace this misguided conviction with the more accurate “fall is for planting.” But we are a small voice, almost unheard among the much-louder message of “springtime gardening.”

In Orange County we enjoy a Mediterranean climate, providing rain in the winter and drought in the summer. Winters are also rather mild.

So here we plant in the fall to give our plants the advantage of winter and spring rainfall.

That allows the roots to penetrate deeply and puts less stress on young, unrooted plants.

Instead of counting on a gardener to nurse new plants for the first few months, we do it the way nature does it.

Fall planted shrubs, vines, trees or perennials often need only minimal attention from the gardener.

Besides enjoying the rain, plants put in during the shorter days of fall or winter can focus on root development rather than aboveground growth.

Although they may look as though they’re doing nothing, they’re actually establishing roots, the key to future vigor.

If my colleagues and I have convinced you that fall is your big planting season, then there’s plenty to do.

What areas of your garden do you want to plant or re-landscape this fall?

What about that side yard that you’ve wanted to get to, the new vegetable garden, the perennial border or the new screening plants? Maybe you have wanted to start over completely in part of your garden.

Now, just before the meat of the planting season begins, is the time to begin removing old, overgrown and unhealthy plants, getting ready for new ones.

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