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Winterizing Tips for your Lawn and Garden
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Your
outdoor plants have worked hard for you all summer, making your yard a
place you’re proud to call home. Properly winterizing your lawn
and garden is an important step toward healthy soil, lush grass, and
happy plants next year. Remember to take care of your outdoor
accessories, including your lawn equipment, gardening tools, and all of
your lawn and garden decor. A little time spent this autumn will make
your gardening and landscaping efforts easier and more enjoyable next
spring!
Let’s start with the easy jobs - First remember to store all of
your lawn and garden decor including fragile planters, gazing balls,
and your deck furniture. Unglazed terra cotta planters left filled with
soil outside will often break in the freezing temperatures so it is
best to clean them and place them in a storage area where they are
protected from the elements.
Autumn is the time to find your birdfeeders and to start stocking your
winter feeding pantry. Soon your many feathered friends will be
flocking to your feeders for that nutritious morsel. Remember to keep
your feeders full through the winter as the birds need reliable food
sources through the winter months.
Now that you’ve done the easy tasks, let’s move on to the
more mundane winterizing chores. Start by simply cleaning up the
vegetable garden. After the first hard frost, remove the year’s
annual plants and the dead vegetation. You can add this material to
your compost pile, but make sure you’re not adding material from
diseased or pest-infested plants. You’ll want to pull perennial
weeds before you mulch your garden down for the winter.
The best part of fall landscape chores is planting the spring-blooming
bulbs. Crocus, tulips, and daffodils are a beautiful addition to the
early spring landscape.
In the yard there’s the major job of raking leaves. These are
great either in the compost pile or as direct mulch on the garden.
Perennial flowers may be smothered by a heavy layer of mulch, however.
Also, wait to prune your trees until later in the winter.
After the ground freezes you can mulch your perennial flowers and newly
planted trees. Certain shrubs will need to be wrapped in burlap to
protect them from wind damage, sun scald, and other winter injury.
Moving on to the mechanical tasks of winterizing your lawn and garden -
While you might try to procrastinate on these jobs until spring,
you’ll be well rewarded for the maintenance you perform this
fall. Drain the gas from your lawnmower and string trimmer. Actually
it’s best to let your mowers and trimmers simply run out of fuel.
If you don’t want to ‘waste’ that little bit of fuel,
add a gas conditioner before the long winter. Be sure to follow
directions. Also, take the same care with your gardening equipment such
as your rotary tiller.
Clean all of your landscaping equipment before you store it away for
the long, cold winter. Wash with soap and water, clean the air filter,
and change the oil. You’ll find that first lawn mowing job in the
spring a little bit easier if you take time to sharpen the blades now.
You can protect that freshly sharpened blade by applying a little spray
oil to the blades. You can also apply light spray oil to other moving
parts such as cables and the throttle controls.
Lastly, drain all of the water from the garden hoses and turn off the
taps. Be sure to store your insecticides, herbicides, and fertilizers
in a safe storage area that will not freeze. Make sure these materials
are kept away from children and pets!
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