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The
Martha's Vineyard Times is a weekly publication.
May 26 - June 1, 2005 Edition
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Garden
Notes
The
Martha's Vineyard Times
Signs
and tasks of spring
May 26, 2005
By
Abigail Higgins
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Pinching
back phlox helps promote sturdier growth. Photo by Susan Safford
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As is often the case, there is a noticeably cooler patch of weather
around the time of the full moon. It is cause for concern more in
spring and fall, when gardeners are pushing their luck and trying
to extend the season in their gardens. This month, in what passes
for spring on Marthas Vineyard (becoming a much-used phrase
brrr!) I think/hope well skate through due to help from
the persistent cloud cover. The bright side is that the cooler temperatures
assist in prolonging the cycle of bloom of some flowering plants and
shrubs. For instance, lilacs and azaleas would be over and done with
quickly if it had been a hot May. Still, this is a beautiful time
almost anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere: there is freshness, new
growth, and life stirring everywhere. It is a joyous time to be born.
In our living room three goslings are peeping away in a box under
lights (next to the still-in-use stove.) I hope they will be living
two-legged lawn mowers before long.
Thinking ahead about the garden and the coming season, this years
Marthas Vineyard Agricultural Society Harvest Festival is planned
for October 1. It will celebrate the bounty of Marthas Vineyard
with daytime activities and an early evening potluck dinner, followed
by a dance. The focus of the potluck is the challenge to the participants
to bring a dish composed of Island-grown ingredients, whether from
your garden, local farms, or Island seafood and game. Ladies and gentlemen,
please plan your plantings and preserving accordingly.Perennial chores
One task of the early part of the growing season is the process of
pinching out. It is a technique of perennial management that seems
under-utilized, where the growing tip of the plant is nipped out once
or several times up until around June 21, the solstice, or even later
in the case of asters and chrysanthemums. Many gardeners are familiar
with it in connection with chrysanthemums at least, but it is a good
management tool for many other plants, annual and perennial, too.
It is most easily done with the fingernails of the thumb and forefinger,
taking out only the tenderest growing tip of the shoot. It is actually
a form of pruning. With annuals, such as snapdragons, salvia, petunias,
and so on, nip out the first set of leaves as you plant. The reasons
to do it are: to promote bushiness; to control height and lessen need
for staking; to retard bloom time; to get more and smaller flowerheads;
and to shape plants in a pleasing form.
There are perennials To Pinch and those To Pinch Not. Among those
To Pinch are the asters (Michaelmas daisies,) garden phlox, garden
chrysanthemums/anthemis/dendranthema group, and perovskia. What one
is looking for in the To Pinch category is a perennial that grows
with a branching habit, where undeveloped axillary buds are forced
into growth by the removal of the apical bud. Therefore perennials
such as platycodon may be pinched to retard their time of flowering
to coincide with a September event, where ordinarily the main flush
of bloom would be in August.
Sedum Autumn Joy is another good subject for pinching.
There, the flowering stem will shift from one large flat-topped flowerhead
to a more branching effect of many smaller flowerets. These will withstand
heavy rainfall better than the one immense flowerhead, thus lessening
the need to stake or prop up the clump after an August tropical depression.
On the other hand, daylilies and lilies from bulbs are merely decapitated
by pinching backthere will be no flower at all, so these are
To Pinch Nots. Additional ones are iris, lupine, and poppy. But I
think most gardeners have a sense or have learnt from sad experience
which plants are not to be pinched back. What I am attempting to encourage
is a tool that can be used to improve plants that are otherwise left
to grow on their own: the meddling human hand.
Jaws strikes again
While I was pinching back phlox in an Edgartown garden last week I
noticed that several of the many clumps had been munched. Rabbits,
was my first thought, but on closer inspection I spotted the telltale
wilted leaves pulled down into the soil here and there, that are typical
of cutworm activity. Stirring around carefully with my cultivator
I was slightly revolted and fascinated to accumulate 49 plump and
juicy cutworms in and among the three clumps! I checked the other
plants and found no more. I have never seen such an infestation before.
I piled the cutworms into a borrowed juice jar and took them home
to the chickens at the end of the day. Overjoyed fowl staged a feeding
frenzy as if they had been famished. While I would have preferred
no cutworms at all, I suppose those phlox have been quite pinched
back. I am keeping a scientifically observational eye on them.
An associated technique to pinching back is cutting back, which is
done by cutting off more growth than just the growing tip. As with
pinching back, aim to cut the stem back to just above a node. Cutting
back is usually done with pruners but is also done with hedging shears.
Santolina and lavender plants are plants I cut back using hedging
shears, as are chrysanthemums. It saves time where there are many
plants to be done. Cutting back like this is also done after the first
flush of bloom with plants such as nepeta, alchemilla, and campanula.
Rake up the clippings carefully afterwards.
Houseplants that are bound for a summer outside are candidates for
cutting or pinching back. The outdoor light will cause their growth
to thicken nicely. Look at rosemary, bay laurel, and ivy topiaries,
the geraniums, gardenias, and other tender perennials with a branching
habit: all will benefit from a nipping here and there. Good time to
repot too.
If there is enough interest (at least five people signing up), Pete
Costas will hold another business class for landscapers, like the
one he held earlier in the spring. It is designed for landscapers
who want some tools, advice, ideas, to get organized so they
can keep track of their expenses and get their billing out in a timely
manner. Please contact him at pete@vineyardgardens.net
if you are interested.
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