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September gardening tips

Produced by: Shannon Richards
Email: srichards@abc15.com
Last Update: 9/03/2008 2:02 pm
Bartlett Lake is green with specks of color from the flowers. (The Whitings)
Bartlett Lake is green with specks of color from the flowers. (The Whitings)
September:

Grass:
· If you plan to over-seed your Bermuda, stop fertilizing. You'll be over-seeding next month.
· If you are not planting a winter lawn, add about 10 pounds of Ironite for every 1,000 square feet.
Trees/Shrubs:
· If you didn’t fertilize your citrus during August do it now. Use ammonium sulfate. This last fertilizing will help create larger fruit. Lemons can be picked as needed later in September even though the fruit is still green. Lemons will not get sweeter, just juicier. Truly ripened limes will turn yellow. This is a good time to get inside your citrus trees, trim out the water sprouts and clean out any dead wood.
· Continue to deep water on the summer schedule, which is about once a week for shrubs and every two weeks for trees. Water native shrubs every two weeks and native trees once a month.
· You may begin planting non-frost sensitive trees and shrubs from containers. Soil temperatures are still warm enough to help roots establish quickly. After planting, water deeply. Dig a planting hole about three times the diameter of the root ball and no deeper.

Flowers:
· Prepare flowerbeds just as you would the vegetable plots, but planting of most flowers should be delayed until mid- October.
· Hose off the rose leaves 1-2 times a week to remove dust, spider mites and potential white flies. Water roses about every three days and apply about five gallons of water to each plant. Prune dead canes and weak top growth, but no heavy pruning.
· Some bulbs like tulips and hyacinths need to be chilled in a paper sack in the vegetable drawer of your refrigerator for four to six weeks or they won’t bloom.

Vegetables:
· The most important step to achieving a successful garden in the Valley is soil preparation. Spade the garden beds to a depth of 8-12 inches, turn the soil over, and break up clods. For every 100 square feet of garden area add 2 pounds of 16-20-0, ammonium phosphate; 5 pounds of sulfur and 5 pounds of Ironite. Spread 3-6 inches (eight to 10 two-cubic-foot bags) of compost, forest mulch or steer manure. Mix all this together, water it well and when the soil has dried to just moist, you are ready to plant.
· If you grow onions use gypsum in place of sulfur because sulfur make onions strong and hot.
· If your tomatoes and peppers are still alive, trim them back to 18 inches. Remember the root zone is as large as the foliage, so sprinkle one-half cup of ammonium sulfate (21-0-0) and Ironite on moist soil over the entire root zone.
· As temperatures drop below 100 degrees, seeds of cool season crops can be planted. These veggies can be directly seeded in the garden later in the month: beets, celery, carrots, chard, endive, peas, green onions, parsnips, lettuce, snap beans, bok choy, broccoli, brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, collard greens, cucumbers, kale, lettuce, leeks, mustard, radishes, spinach and turnips.
· You can put in transplants of tomatoes, lettuce (head & leaf), strawberries, onions, broccoli, brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, celery, chard.

Your Desert Garden - Monthly Don't List for September
1. When fertilizing citrus, don't sprinkle the fertilizer next to the trunk since the roots won't get the benefit there. Fertilize the outer 2/3 of the root area.
2. Hold off on transplants of broccoli, brussel sprouts, cabbage and cauliflower until after the end of September or beginning of October. The temperatures must be consistently below 100°F.
3. Don't over water after transplanting trees and shrubs. Too much water can drown and rot the roots.

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