A hard winter doesn’t necessarily mean doom and gloom in your garden. The cold weather can help to break up the garden soil making it easier to cultivate, so winter can be a good time to take a look at your soil care regime.
Digging
Winter digging is a great way to work off the excesses of the festive season, though it’s important to make sure you don’t overdo it, especially if you are not used to strenuous exercise, be sure to warm up first and stretch your muscles gently. Tackle a small area at a time and treat yourself to a lovely hot bath when you have finished.
Winter digging is a great way to prepare your garden soil for the season ahead. While much of the garden is dormant you will be able to dig up and remove a wide variety of perennial weeds and their roots, reducing their impact for the season ahead. If your garden suffers with nettles, docks, dandelions, bind weed and more; a good deep dig over can make great inroads into weed populations.
Choose a day when the soil is not wet and claggy and choose a digging tool that is manageable, a large spade will lift several kilos of soil and may be too much for you to handle.
Digging the soil over and leaving large clumps on the surface allows the action of frost and defrost to break up clods and make the soil more friable.
Don’t forget the soil in your greenhouse and polytunnel borders. Winter is a great time to give this a revamp too. If possible dig it out into a wheelbarrow and cart it out to another part of the garden. Replace with a quality, loam based potting compost and improve with a well-rotted, nutrient rich soil conditioner. The secret to healthy plants and gardens lies in the quality and health of your soil.
Soil Improving
Although plants can and do manufacture food within their leaves, they also draw upon nutrients in the soil to boost their growth and flower or fruit potential. If you spend a fortune each year on plant food, it may be time to take a look at the health of your soil. While there is nothing wrong with supplementary feeding, you may find you get much better results from feeding the soil, which will then, in turn, feed your plants. The most obvious way to feed the soil is to add well-rotted farmyard manure. This not only adds vast amounts of nutrients to the soil but it also increases the organic content of the soil, improving soil structure, enhancing moisture retention and attracting a wide variety of beneficial soil organisms such as worms and beetles. Another great soil improver is garden made compost, the compost that you make from recycling garden and kitchen waste into a rich, friable soil improver. The great thing about this is that it will contain vast amounts of beneficial microorganisms that helped compost the material and in turn will improve the growing environment of your soil. It should also contain rich numbers of earthworms. If you think your soil is depleted in beneficial microbes then consider using a product such as Root Grow, which you add to the soil when planting, this contains populations of healthy soils microbes that will enhance the health of your plants.
To know more about
greenhouses and growing plants in your
greenhouse visit http://www.growhouse-greenhouses.co.uk/greenhouses.php
Loading...