There are a lot of todos in the garden in the wintertime. We run through some of the most effective and beneficial tasks to help your garden next season with Keith Ramsey from "In the Garden."
In the Garden with Keith Ramsey is a podcast aimed at helping you grow and maintain a beautiful and healthy garden and landscape.
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Keith: Hey, Keith Ramsey
with garden supply company.
People are always asking what to do
in the winter time in the garden.
And there's, there's a long
list of, to do's in the winter.
Not many people want to go out
because we've got such cold weather.
One of my favorite things to do
while it's cool is spreading mulch.
It, it requires a little cleanup
picking up sticks and debris and
raking the beds out and getting
everything prepped and ready for spring.
You usually want to cut your
, perennial plants that just
need cleaning up or do pruning.
And there's lots of pruning.
that can be done during the wintertime,
so once you get through some of
those projects and we'll touch back
on pruning further down, but Once
you get all the beds cleaned out.
Mulching is a hot process.
The mulch itself creates a lot of heat
and when it's cool out it's a nice thing
to you'll go out with a heavy coat.
And, as soon as you get into that
mulch pile, you'll be shedding layers.
And so it's something I like to do
it, it's probably not a bad thing
this time of year because I don't
know about everybody else, but I had
way too many calories over Christmas.
And that's a calorie
burning project for sure.
Get you out, doing something that's good
for your heart and burning calories.
Mulch also holds moisture in
the ground and it it holds
a lot of heat in the ground.
So it's good for plant roots.
Our plants, we say it over and
over, but winter, fall, winter and
early spring is the time to plant.
You can plant 12 months out of the year.
There's really no, no better time
than when the plants are dormant.
But you get a plant in the
ground and it's in the middle of
winter and you put mulch on it.
The reason that it putting this stuff
in the ground in the winter time is
so good is that we've got the plants
will grow roots all through the winter.
And, but when you mulch it, you're
adding heat to the heat, to the ground.
You're going to grow a lot
more roots, a lot faster.
It knocks the edge off of
the cold for the plants.
So it's a really good thing for
the plant in the winter time
and then good for weed control.
It's, you're getting ahead of the
head of the schedule your molten
and things that you might get to
germinate that are on the surface.
And then the cold weather
is going to kill them out.
When I'm cleaning up prepping for mulch
A lot of the a lot of the debris that
we have I've got a fire pit, so I'm
picking up sticks and stuff like that.
I just drop them in the fire pit and
I'm prepping my I'll break them up
and build a fire at the same time.
And it's a nice way to get rid of
that kind of stuff if all, and, or
take it, taking it out to the street.
But and sometimes when we're working in
the yard, depending on the time of the
year, if it's cool, And I will fire up the
fire pit and just keep dropping the Dixon
or pinecones in as we're working in the
yard, it makes it a little more enjoyable.
And then compost piles.
If you've got a you're raking up leaves
and debris and cutting perennials
back North Carolina soil needs compost
probably more than, the heavy clay
soil just really benefits from top
dressing or digging compost in.
It's worth every penny by
the bag when you're planting,
because if you don't have.
A decent amount of compost and good soil.
Plants aren't going to
do as well as they could.
They'll probably live, but they're
not going to do as well as they could.
But when you got compost, that's
just coming out of your compost pile.
A, it's probably more
alive than a bag of soil.
But B it's free.
And it gives you, it's a shorter walk.
You don't have.
Package it up in a bag and put it
at the curb where, it has to go
to a composting facility and then
you're buying it on the other end.
When you start a compost pile,
if that's something, it's,
that's a good winter project.
I usually use a little
bit of nitrogen in there.
Nitrogen nitrogen fixing organisms
are what break down compost.
Adding just a handful of any
kind of fertilizer or just a
nitrogen based fertilizer is good.
Good to get a compass fired up and hot,
and then some sort of compost starter,
like a stoma has a great compost
starter and a few cups of that to the
pile as you're adding stuff debris
to, it will just speed the process.
And then every spring I have some fresh
worms too, we always order in worms and
having red worms in your compost pile.
We'll we'll certainly speed the
process of breaking stuff down.
The other thing this time of year
I started looking at is I'll start
collecting seeds, looking at the seed
rack and figuring out what I'm going
to grow something new for this year.
Seeing what's available, just making sure
that some of my favorite varieties are
available and they seeds in the last few
years have been really hard to come by.
The the availability
just hasn't been there.
I like to get my seeds in early and have
them sitting on the shelf ready to go,
and I can plan out my garden at that time.
Soil testing is something
that I always think, winter,
time's a good time to do it.
The state does it for free.
It's probably the single best
thing you can do for your soil.
Figure out where you're at with pH so
that you can do some adjustment to the.
And then knowing what it's lacking
in micronutrients and then nitrogen
phosphorus and potash so that you
can make those adjustments in your
plant really is getting what it needs.
Lime is inexpensive to add to the soil and
it really just makes a huge difference.
So in the winter time, if, even if you
don't get a soil sample out, just lime in
your landscape line, lime in your garden
getting lime out on your grass people
usually come in and buy one or two bags.
It's probably something in most
cases where people need three to five
bags, bigger lawns need 10 to 20.
It takes a lot of lawn to
really make a difference.
And when you're adding
lime, you're adding calcium.
In the garden, that's going to
be beneficial to, or tomatoes or
peppers and that kind of stuff.
And that gives it time to
break down and it's actually,
readily available in the soil.
And your stuff's going
to do a whole lot better.
We just, in the last few
weeks have started looking at.
What we've started prepping
for putting some bags together.
People that don't, that don't have
the space or if you don't have a big
garden outside planning, lettuce bags
there's all kinds of fabric bags now
that you can buy seeding those indoors.
You can start to harvest them
indoors or you can move them in.
They're small enough, they produce a fair
amount and you can stagger that crop.
So you could plant lettuce every
week if you wanted, and in five
or 10 bags and then just cycle
through them as they're ready.
And we talked about pruning, the one
thing about pruning as you can see
into the plant, and you can see where
plant, where branches are crossing
over and you need to remove those.
You also see the overall shape of the
plant, so you can start to shape it.
If the plant needs to be reduced
in size, you can cut the plant.
Structurally pruning things that
are, we're a limbs getting too heavy.
You can take some of the weight
off of it and it's just all there.
And it's all visual in the wintertime.
It's the other time.
The other thing that I'm looking at
out while I'm looking at pruning is,
the hard part of the garden the the
bones of a garden, and figuring out,
structurally where we're missing stuff.
You can all things that need
to be screened or a neighbor's
window that you could block out.
It's a good time.
You.
To see that stuff.
And, you get used to it as the winter
goes on, but if you take a good hard
look putting a plan or two in this
time of year, a year or so from now,
you're not looking at your neighbor's
window or they're not looking into your
backyard or side yard, or if you've
got an eyesore trash cans and that
kind of stuff that you want to screen
that's a good time to figure it out.
And sometimes you got a deciduous
plant there in the springtime.
And it's covered up and you're not looking
at it and then, or deciduous tree and
you can't see it and then wintertime
rolls around and you remember it.
And then you forget about it as long
as the tree leaves that back out,
but that's a good time to transplant
a deciduous plant and then come back
in and come back in and do something.
That's evergreen that you're
going to have year round.
Just figuring out the bones and the garden
and taking care of some of that stuff.
We'll see you next time.