The Potting Shed
The Arrival of Spring!
Meteorological Spring started on the 1st and the vernal equinox marking the start of Astronomical Spring is on the 20th. The garden is already bursting with Spring flowers and the signs of new growth - plenty to enjoy with a cup of tea and a copy of the new March Newsletter!
Working
Jobs to Do in the Garden this Month
The start of Spring...
Hardy annuals can be sown outside where they are to flower, or you can sow in trays undercover or in a sheltered spot.
Sow vegetables that require a long growing season, such as Chillis, in a propagator or warm window sill.
Finish cutting back all dead tops of perennials to make way for the new growth.
Bush roses should be pruned now.
Shrubs grown for winter colour of their stems such as Dogwood (Cornus) should be cut back (stooled) now.
Mow lawns when necessary, but raise the cutter height so as not to remove too much of the grass blade for the first few cuts. Dedicated moss treatments or combination treatments of moss and spring ‘weed and feed’ can be applied towards the end of the March.
Fill in any depressions in the grass and over-sow any bare patches with new seed.
Divide congested perennials - wait until the first signs of growth then lift and split, discarding the dead or woody centre of the clump and replant the younger vigorous parts from around the edges
If you have any indoor bulbs (hyacinth, amaryllis, narcissi) that have finished flowering, move these to a very sheltered outdoor area or ideally a cold frame or unheated greenhouse and continue to water and feed until the leaves die down naturally in a few months’ time.
Ventilate greenhouses on warmer or sunnier days if you are overwintering plants or perhaps give it a pre-Spring clean inside and out and ensure that the glass is clean to allow as much light in as possible.
Keep the greenhouse well ventilated and water regularly as warm days and rapidly growing plants will dry the compost out quickly.
Chitted seed potatoes should be planted from late March through April, especially first-early potatoes that will be ready to harvest in about 12 weeks.
The old canes from autumn fruiting Raspberries should be cut back to ground level, but do not cut the canes from the earlier, summer-fruiting varieties.
Dahlia tubers and Lily and Dutch Iris bulbs can also be started back into life under cover but do be careful of any cold weather
Something missing? - Use the Feedback form to suggest your own Tips and Dos and Don'ts...
Relaxing
What's Looking Good in the Garden
Use the arrows on the pictures to browse
Chaenomeles speciosa, Japanese quince
Hellebore
Gorse
Camellia, Camellia japonica
Arabis ferdinandi-coburgi 'Old Gold'
Polyanthus, Primula
Narcissi
Curry Plant, Helichrysum italicum
Crocus 'Victor Hugo'
Kale 'Scarlet' (Borecole)
Narcissi
Frost on the Greenhouse
Pulmonaria officinalis, Common Lungwort
Heather
Crocus
Something missing? - Use the Feedback form to let us know your recommended plants to grow...
Thinking
This month's Wordsearch and CrossGram
Wordsearch
CrossGram - Chaenomeles
Part Anagram; Part Crossword. The answers to all the short clues are shorter-word anagrams of the long starter word, and there's even some clues to help you complete it! The answers are at the bottom of the page.
A sure sign of Spring is the colourful flowering of Chaenomeles or Japanese Quince that seem to magic flowers from bare-wood stems. Our March meeting on Tuesday 12th March will feature these beautiful and versatile shrubs with a talk by David Ford who holds the Plant Heritage National Collection of Chaenomeles with over 70 cultivars.
Visiting and Seeing
Places to Go and Things to Do
The ‘Houseplant Takeover – Plants Before Time’ exhibition at RHS Wisley runs until the 10th March.
Several gardens are opening in March as part of the National Garden Scheme. For more details of all the NGS gardens opening in our area, please see the NGS Website.
Shamley Green Gardening Club are hosting an evening with Christine Walkden on Tuesday, 5th March from 6.45pm at Longacre School, Hullbrook Lane, Shamley Green, GU5 0NQ. Tickets are £15 from Aurelle Tomkins, aurelletomkins@gmail.com
Sunday 17th March, 2.30pm – The Surrey Horticultural Federation Spring Talk with Nick Hamilton. Normandy Village Hall. There are a few tickets still available (£15), but please check with Janet Arm (01252 783133 / janetarm@btinternet.com). More information on the ‘goings-on’ with the Surrey Horticultural Federation are in the new SHF Early Spring Newsletter.
Something missing? - Use the Feedback form to suggest places to visit or local events...
Remembering
The Old 'Potting Shed' Pages
CrossGram - The Answers for March
(Click to Reveal)