Monthly
Gardening Calendar
Sharon Morrisey, Consumer
Horticulture Agent
University of Wisconsin-Extension in Milwaukee Co.
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March, 2003
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Whether it comes in like a lion or a lamb, March is anything but meek. It is known for kites careening in the wind as well as crocuses blooming through the snow. It teases us with sweet smelling air that floats snowflakes the next day.
For gardeners it is a month of preparations. Planting plans, seed orders, tool tune-ups and cold-frames.
Outdoors, wait until mid to late April to do thorough garden spring cleaning, but its okay to lightly tidy-up on those lovely days that are surely to come.
Pruning chores can begin in earnest this
month, however. Look for crossing branches, errant branches that
make the plant’s shape unsightly and those growing at too narrow
an angle to the trunk. Cut back to a bud or a branch growing in
the direction you want the new growth to go. Pruning paint and
wound dressing are not recommended.
UW-Extension in Milwaukee and Waukesha counties are offering two
hands-on pruning workshops on Saturday, March 8th and Wednesday
March 12th. To register call Mary at the Waukesha County UWEX
office at 262-548-7775.
Use the numbers given after a calendar
entry to get more information through the UW-Extension
InfoSource educational phone message system. In metro Milwaukee,
dial 290-2450 and follow the instructions. Check out the daily
Dial-A-Garden-Tip, topic #791, for a different timely gardening
message every day.
Visit the UW-Extension's Horticulture Web page at
www.uwex.edu/ces/wihort/. InfoSource messages for the garden calendar entries can accessed
here and downloaded for future reference.
First
Week
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Take bulbs out of cold storage for forcing as
soon as they have had a long enough cold period. The smaller
bulbs like hyacinth and crocus only need 8 weeks of cold while
tulips and daffodils need 12 - 14. Paper white narcissus do not
require this chilling so can still be purchased and potted up to
grow and bloom yet this spring.
Tender bulbs of tuberous begonias, caladiums,
dahlias, and canna lilies can be potted up in well-drained soil
rich in organic matter. Discard any that have rotted in storage.
If you have been storing geraniums in cool,
dark conditions, its time to pot them up, cut them back and
start watering again.
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Cut back geraniums and coleus that you have kept growing indoors
through the winter to only a few buds. This will stimulate new
growth and a fuller plant by the time summer arrives.
The longer days and shorter nights now will stimulate
houseplants to grow more rapidly again so you may resume
fertilizing. Use fertilizers at only half-strength and only
every other watering. If March is cloudy plants will still use
less water and therefore less fertilizer.
Continue feeding your holiday plants like Christmas and Thanksgiving cacti,
poinsettias, cyclamen, azalea and amaryllis. After flowering they start
actively growing again and therefore need more nutrients.
Second
Week
The end of the dormant season is the best
time to prune almost all trees and shrubs. Pines are about the
only exception. Let their new growth expand until young needles
are half of full size before pruning.
Spring flowering shrubs can be pruned now, too, unless you can't
stand losing the flower buds on the stems you are removing.
Branches cut from spring flowering shrubs and fruit trees can be
brought in and put in warm water to force them into bloom.
Do not use tree wound dressing or paint on pruning cuts. These
can actually slow the healing process.
Elm, maple, birch, and black walnut ooze sap when pruned in the
spring due to water pressure from the moist soil. It will not
harm the plant but you can prune these in early summer or late
fall instead if you are bothered by it.
Some insect pests of trees and shrubs are
best controlled by spraying with dormant oil. This includes
scale insects of pine, lilac, and euonymus and many of the
gall-forming insects. These insects reside on stems or needles
and are smothered by the oil. Galls are mostly a cosmetic
problem but scales can weaken plants. Check weather forecasts to
be sure temperatures will stay above freezing for 8 - 12 hours
after spraying to avoid damaging stems and needles.
Prune out and burn or bury the brown, shriveled "witches-brooms"
on honeysuckle. The leaf-folding aphid that causes these overwinters in these growths. They feed on new growth as soon as
the buds break in the spring. This one is hard to control since
untreated honeysuckles are everywhere. This may be a good time
to consider replacing honeysuckles with less invasive plants
with fewer pest problems.
Sow seed for parsley in pots on a bright
window sill.
Third
Week
Make St. Patrick's Day a floral holiday with
shamrocks and other assorted foliage plants. Kids get a kick out
of making their own "Irish" carnations by using white carnations
and a vase of green food coloring and water. At the same time
they learn that plants suck water up and move it through the
whole plant.
Start planning the vegetable garden. Be sure to include your
children or grandchildren in the process this year.
Seeds of the following annual flowers can be started indoors:
ageratum, wax begonia, browallia, dianthus and carnation, dusty
miller, impatiens, larkspur, lobelia, dwarf marigold,
nierembergia, pansy, petunia, moss rose, snapdragons, and
stocks. Be sure to use a sterile seed starting medium,
supplemental lighting, and bottom heat for best results.
Different species also have different requirements for light or
darkness during germination. Look up the varieties you have on
the seed packet, in a seed catalog or a good reference book.
Tops
of onions seeded last month should be clipped to keep them at about 4
inches. This diverts energy
to bulb growth.
Fourth
Week
Sow seeds indoors for the following
vegetables: broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, celery, eggplant,
and head lettuce.
Sow seeds indoors for the following flowers: alyssum, verbena,
calendula, celosia, coleus, dahlia, phlox, and salvia.
Be mindful of warm days when the sun can cause heat to build-up
under rose cones, cold frames, and in other plant protection
systems. However, avoid removing mulches prematurely from
plants with tender new tissue forming.
Examine lawn areas where water may have pooled or snow cover
lingered. Snow mold fungus may develop in these areas.
Also look for meadow mouse tunnels in the browned grass.
Both can be improved by roughing up the affected area with a
rake to encourage the adjacent healthy grass plants to fill in.
Take your lawnmower in for servicing to avoid the rush at the
repair shop on that first nice weekend of April. Get it
tuned up, the oil changed, and tighten all bolts. At the
very least, get the blade sharpened.
On nice days, go outside and turn the compost pile. This
will get it "cooking" again. Hopefully, it will also help
you resist the urge to start working the soil too soon.
(OVERVIEW)
(TECHNIQUES)
During inclement weather, clean-up and sharpen garden
tools and prepare other gardening equipment for the busy months ahead.
Inventory pesticides, fertilizers, bags of potting soil and amendments.
Finish up last years records. And there is still time to do a little
dreaming and planning.
If you need more room to garden, consider renting a 20' x 20' or 30' x 30' plot
from the Milwaukee County UW-Extension's rental gardening program. Call
414-290-2405. In Waukesha County, the UW-Extension's rental gardening
program can be reached at 262-548-7775.