Showing posts with label gardening in summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening in summer. Show all posts

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Gardening Today: Removing Dead Branches from Trees

My husband and I were up early today because if we are going to do any work outdoors it has to be early in the morning because afternoons are too hot. Here in the central states, we have extreme heat and drought. To give you an idea the average temperature has been 100 degrees Fahrenheit, with a heat index of 110. We are both used to working outdoors, but this extreme heat is just too hot.



I have been weeding the garden beds and my husband removed the dead branches from the Mimosa tree and also trimmed the branches that are too close to the windows on the side of the house. Then my husband pruned back the poison ivy that was growing over the wall. I cannot touch it but for some reason, he can pull it out with his hands and it does not bother him.

We worked together today on manicuring the trees and also treated the flowers, shrubs, and around the trees with a soap wash to get rid of the aphids, spider mites, and beetles

Learn more about mimosa trees by reading my blog post here.  Know that our mimosa tree is no longer flowering so it is safe to trim back the branches to encourage growth and many blooms next year.


Happy summer gardening everyone. If you are out in the garden be sure to have some water close by. Keeping your body hydrated is the best way to prevent heat stroke.  

Learn more about pruning your flowering trees by viewing this video.



Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Gardening in the Heat of the Summer

Now that the peak heat of the summer is here I make a point to get up at dawn so that I can get whatever yard or garden work completed.  During this time I can weed the gardens, deadhead the flowers, and water the plants.  However, I need to wait a few hours to use any of my electric or gas-operated garden tools. 
Watering lilac shrubs in summer

I was going to use the electric grass trimmer to manicure around the flower gardens but decided to hold off on this project until next week when the weather will be 20 degrees cooler. At 9:00 this morning, the temperature was 89 degrees and I thought it was too hot.

Other than that maintaining the garden, I find it is a full-time job to keep the container and specialty gardens hydrated. The plants get a good watering in the am with a soaker hose but come noon the topsoil in containers and garden beds looks like dust.  So I am outdoors again in the late afternoon to water the hosta, coleus, and fern plants because the heat of the summer is causing them to feel stress.

Cosmo flower-like hot weather
Zinnia flowers grow best in the hot sun


The only plants in my garden that are flourishing are the zinnias, cosmos, and four o'clock flowers. These heat-seeking plants are producing multiple flowers and the plants do not bolt when the summer weather gets hot.