Gardening

REG’S JANUARY GARDENING TIPS
GIVE YOUR SEEDLINGS A GOOD OLD PASTING… Table that is. Yes I find that old pasting tables are a great gardening aid. Whenever space is getting short in the greenhouse bung one up for temporary extra staging. You can also take them anywhere in the garden to use as an in-situ potting bench and they are handy when dividing smaller clumps of herbaceous perennials. They last even longer if treated with a wood preserver. One of the old gardeners’ that I used to work with when I was an apprentice cut the feet off worn out wellingtons and wore the leg parts on his arms when pruning prickly shrubs. Mind you that was fairly mild compared to some of his other habits!

Reg's January Gardening Tips

EARLY JANUARY.

  • Protect vulnerable plants from frost damage and scorching due to cold winds.
  • Warm up the soil for early sowings by covering an area with a polythene sheet, or cloches. If weed seedlings germinate under this all well and good, just hoe them off.
  • Seed potatoes are around now, buy them soon while there is still a good choice of varieties available. Stand them in trays with the end with the most buds uppermost in a light, frost-free place to begin to sprout or “chit”. Plant them outdoors in late spring.
  • Remember to feed your garden birds and make sure that water is also available for them.

MID JANUARY.

  • Continue to prepare the vegetable garden for the new season, unless it is too wet to dig. If you get desperate you could always spread your weight by working off a plank.
  • Apples and pears, but not plums, cherries or any stone fruits, as well as currants, gooseberries, and summer fruiting raspberries can all be pruned now.
  • If you have a heated greenhouse, plant up some sprouted seed potatoes in 12 inch pots of John Innes compost No 3. The crop should be ready in April.
  • Seeds are uppermost in gardeners’ minds at the moment. Make sure that you buy yours soon as some varieties may be in short supply.
  • Check over your trees and shrubs, as this is a good time to prune off any dead, diseased or misplaced branches except on plums and cherries.
  • If your greenhouse is empty, clean and disinfect it ready for the new season. In an unheated greenhouse, or cold frame, sow some early salads. Try winter lettuce, forcing radishes, spring onions and stump-rooted carrots.
  • Avoid overwatering foliage plants, while plants in flower are likely to need more frequent watering. Keep an eye open for pests and diseases.

LATE JANUARY

  • Cut back climbing plants, like Virginia creeper, ivy, climbing hydrangea etc. grown on house walls by at least 45cm (18in) from all window and door frames. The plants can continue growth in spring without obstructing them.
  • The ready germinated seedlings and young plug plants should be available now ready for growing on in a heated greenhouse. This method removes some of the risk of growing your own plants from seed, as well as offering young plants that can only be propagated by cuttings.
  • Privet hedges that have been allowed to get out of control can be cut back hard at this time of year. This will encourage strong new growth from the base.
  • Hedges are often ignored when it comes to feeding, so give them a dressing of pelleted chicken manure now. It will provide a gentle boost through the growing season.
  • This is a good time to apply garden lime, especially in the vegetable plot. Lime and manure should never be applied at the same time, so where manure was dug in during the autumn, put the lime on now.

January Gardening Tips

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