Fall into These Horticulture Habits for Winter

Shuttering your garden for the fall is easier than you might think. You probably already know to clean up any debris and uproot weeds that love nothing more than to spread, but there are a few more horticulture steps that can really put you on the right path for a renewal in spring and bounteous summer harvest.

Get Your Garden Cleaned Up 

Horticulture

It might be tempting to dust off your knees, climb out of your garden, and let nature take its chilly winter course. The thing to realize is that while that might be easier now, you could be setting yourself up for more work later. Prepping your soil – and perhaps planting a cover crop – and replenishing your mulch can make life so much easier in early spring next year.

You want to remove any weeds you find or decayed plants before your ground gets too cold. A professional landscaping company can help you remove weeds, prune perennials, and even turn your fall leaves into mulch and compost that nourishes your soil year round.

If you’re really strapped for time, though, and you don’t want weeds to grow then put plastic or cardboard over existing weeds and leave that cover on through the winter to keep weeds from spreading. Or call on DK Landscaping and get landscaping experts to clean up your garden in time for winter.

Making a light pass of your garden with a tiller can also clear your garden of insects that plan on overwintering (spending the winter) in your soil. Insects like grubs and beetles want to hunker down and spend the winter in your soil, but these same insects can ruin your plants and screw up your soil!

A Horticulture Essential: Prepping Your Soil for Winter 

The plants in your garden are actually more complex than they might look at first glance. When your garden’s soil doesn’t have the nutrients that your plants need to grow to their full potential, they emit stress hormones that can make it easier for nearby insects or diseases to take hold of your garden. That’s obviously not what you want.

Late fall might actually be the best time of the year to call on a company like DK Landscaping to test your soil to make sure that it contains the right kind of nutrients to promote plant growth. DK’s horticulture experts will look to see how much organic matter is in your soil, gauge the level of mineral nutrients in your soil that your plant roots can absorb, and measure levels of potassium and phosphorous.

(Nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium are your soil’s three main macronutrients. Potassium helps for water retention in your garden and nitrogen and phosphorous ensure that you get early growth and healthy roots.)

That might sound really complicated, but a simple test can tell you a whole lot. Something as simple as adding lime to your soil can help bring your soil’s pH into balance too. Adding lime is also really good to do in late fall because it takes a while for the soil to absorb it. Time is your friend in the winter months when your garden is basically laying fallow.

Leaves are Solid Gold for Your Garden 

Once you’ve tested your soil, you’re going to want to apply some kind of mulch (goes on top of soil) or compost (goes into soil). Chopped-up leaves sprinkled over your garden will enrich your soil, improve water retention, and stop weeds dead in their tracks.

DK Landscaping  can handle more complex horticulture and help you with regular garden maintenance, irrigation, and general landscaping in fall and throughout the year.

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