AUTUMN the best season for planting!



The advantages of planting a garden in fall season:

The landscape around us is obviously winding down as the days grow colder and the nights get longer. Mid-to-late fall sees most of the plant world going from mellow to muted to moribund. But, contrary though it seems, this is the best time of the year to plant new things and to work in the garden.
The reason is simply fall weather, which, up until the ground freezes, is kind to human beings as well as to newly planted trees, shrubs, and perennials.
In autumn, there are many more good days to be outside than there are in spring. Serious gardeners love November; they're happy working up a sweat inside their hoodies and gloves when everyone else is starting to huddle indoors. 
At first thought, spring, with its explosion of buds and shoots and sprouts seems like the
best time to put new plants in the ground. But spring in much of North America has quite a small window for planting—between the last frost and the onset of hot weather. Some of the days in that window will be rainy, making the soil muddy and hard to work with a lot of the time. The soil takes a while to warm up from a winter's worth of cold; a new plant's roots grow slowly in chilled earth.
In fall, the soil still holds summer's warmth, which encourages root growth up until the ground freezes. Fall planting gets perennials, shrubs, and trees off to a faster start the following spring. In mild-winter parts of the country, fall is even more emphatically the superior season for planting because roots can keep growing all winter.
Plants shift their objectives when the sun wanes and the temperatures go down. They stop the spring and summer work of making leaves, shoots, flowers, berries, and fruit. All their energy goes into establishing roots.
Trees, shrubs, and perennials put into the ground in fall don't have to deal with heat and drought early in their young lives. By late next spring, when things begin to heat up, the plant's roots will be up to the job of absorbing and circulating nutrients and water. 

The Ultimate Late Summer Garden

The ultimate perennial garden. It's not difficult to bring that vision to mind. For me, it's a classic English border, with iris, lupine and poppies, that continues blooming right into the fall, with wave after wave of color and form: foxgloves, roses, delphinium, dianthus, hollyhocks, lilies and more.
Bloom time in most American perennial borders runs from late May through early July—a glorious but short 5 or 6 weeks. By late July, most perennial gardens are past their prime and look pretty dull for the rest of the season.
Fortunately, there are many perennials that bloom in late summer, including coneflower, asters, mums, Russian sage, cimicifuga, sedum, rudbeckia, and phlox. But I've found annuals are the real key to summer-long color.
Unlike many perennials, most annuals thrive in summer's heat and once they get started, will keep blooming right into early fall. With a little planning you can create annual - perennial partnerships that will keep your flowers gardens looking terrific for a full 5 o 6 months.
There a are few perennials that save their big show for the end of the summer, and remember impatients bloom until frost, and the the coleus have incredibles colors to choose from.


Preparing your garden for Autumn

                                                                                   Soil Health:
Soil is dry after a hot, dry summer. Increase organic matter, especially nitrogen, as it adds moisture.
  • Organic resources – things that are from a natural source
  • Organic products – liquid fertilisers, eggs,  worm juice, compost tea, comfrey tea, purchased products (ensure they are organic) and slow release fertilisers,pellets etc.
Gather resources from around your home. Don’t throw away green waste (i don’t call it waste !!)  into green waste bins, keep it all !!  Soil can become water repellent after long periods of dry. Adding organic matter will help to hold moisture in soil.
Grow Support Plants around your gardens. A few great plants are the veggies and herbs
Support Plants are used to improve soil health and as good companion plants. Growing
these plants amongst your gardens means you have free resources available as needed. Chop up the foliage and place over the soil, cover with a sprinkle of mulch. This is a quick and easy way to feed the soil.

                                                                          Get to know your soil type.
  • Sand – has large particles, good drainage, poor water holding, good root development, good aeration, high erosion & low compaction.
  • Clay – has small particles, holds nutrients well, bad drainage, poor aeration, lower erosion; high compaction.
  • Loam – balance of sand, clay and silt and best growing for plants.

  • While gardens are resting here’s some jobs to do…
    • pruning
    • weeding
    • composting
    • mulching
    • irrigation maintenance
    • planting
    • pests & diseases
    • seed saving
    • harvesting
    • cooking
    Make a list of foods to grow.

    • Start with a ‘Shopping List’
    • Sow seeds
    • Propagate cuttings
    • Planting seedling
    • During Autumn it’s still warm enough to do vegetative propagating and grow new plants.
Nurture & Care for your Garden
Our gardens respond to nurturing and care just like us. If you spend time in the garden, enjoying all the abundance of nature and connecting with nature then your garden will respond. We have a natural connection with nature and plants!!