May 2022 gardening Tips

This year, April and March seemed to swap places in terms of weather, so Magnolias and Camellias were in peak bloom and then ‘browned off’ by frost in my garden. The daffodils, primroses and hyacinths have been more resilient and given a very good show.

Everything else is later than usual – slower to germinate and leaves reluctant to expose themselves to frost.

By the time you read this, though, in May.  It will be greener and maybe warmer and you can get on with some of these tasks…

Kitchen garden

  • Earth up potatoes when the foliage reaches 23cm/9in to prevent green tubers or, if frost is expected, cover smaller sprouts with soil for protection.
  • Sow carrots, radishes, beetroot, lettuce and spring onions for successional harvesting.
  • Harden off courgette and squash plants that were started under glass and protect with cloches or fleece if cold nights are forecast
  • Start to harvest asparagus spears
  • Direct sow French beans and sweet corn.

Ornamental garden

  • Prune overgrown Camellia to young side shoots which will flower next year.
  • Prune Forsythia and Philadelphus as flowering finishes
  • Remove a third of old wood on Spiraea to open up the bush
  • Dead head Rhododendron to make room for new growth
  • Plant out Dahlias and Cannas
  • Dead head spring bulbs but LEAVE THE LEAVES to feed the bulbs until they die back. If daffodils did not flower well, lift and divide the clumps.
  • Take soft wood cuttings of Fuchsia, Anthemis, pelargonium and verbena.
  • Support tall and heavy-headed perennials with pea sticks or special supports
  • At the end of May, do the ‘Chelsea chop’ on late flowering herbaceous plants like sedum (Hylotelephium) that tend to flop outwards. The flowers may be later but they will be sturdier. Other suitable plants are Chrysanthemum, Helenium, Helianthus, Monarda, Phlox, Rudbeckia and VeronicastrumDo not chop lupins, irises, paeonies, acanthus or Hemoracallis

Open Gardens

Beechenwood Farm, Odiham RG29 1JA: open every Wednesday 30th March – 8th June (2-5) also Monday 2nd May (2-5)

Brick Kiln Cottage, Herriard RG25 2PR: open on Saturday 7th, Sunday 15th May (11.30 – 4.00)

‘Selborne’, East Worldham, Alton GU34 3AE: open 28th,29th May and again in July

 

Keep the society going!

Dear Members,

On May 9th our chairman (Alec) has called a committee meeting during which the winding up of the society by the end of September will be discussed.

The reason is that we have not recruited any new committee members. We need a new chairman, treasurer, show secretary and trading secretary, without whom the society loses all purpose – no trading shed, no shows etc.  This would be a great loss after 68years.

If anyone could see their way to taking on some of these roles, either individually, or sharing with someone as a team effort, we would love to talk to you about what it entails.  Either come to the trading shed on a Saturday morning, or contact a committee member directly soon.


Spring 2024 : Church Crookham and Fleet Garden Society, Trading Hut News

The trading hut (fully re-stocked) will be open on Saturdays, 2024, 10am -11.30am  – until October 2024

Why not drop in for a chat Saturday mornings and view the range of young plants on sale by members?

Trading Hut, Church Crookham Memorial Hall, Sandy Lane, GU52 8LD, (near the Wyvern pub).

Click here to view/download July 2023 Shed Price List

 


April Hints and Tips

2022 – The beginning of April – cold and snow!  I’m wondering what the spring and summer will offer.  However, I can see buds fattening on apples, pears, azaleas and magnolias and the earliest Prunus trees and Camellias are in flower. The main show for Spring-flowering shrubs is usually in April and May and it is sometimes worth lifting their canopies to allow spring flowering bulbs to show off underneath them (Scillas, grape hyacinths, anemones, Narcissi, and Cyclamen coum are good candidates).

Still, it is the time to get the kitchen garden going, now the soil is warming up.

  • You can sow beans, carrots, chard, brassicas, beetroot and peas outside, and pumpkins, courgettes and sweetcorn under glass.
  • In preparation for the beans, dig a deep trench and line it with newspaper and fill it with compost to hold moisture. Then erect a bean frame of hazel poles or bamboos for support.  Twiggier pea sticks will help the peas.
  • At the beginning of April, plant early potatoes and work through to main crop by the end of the month.

Hellebore are nearly over – why not collect their seedlings?

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