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Groundhog Day, February 2nd, is always so hopeful even if the
Groundhog does see his shadow. Quite technically, there are
exactly six weeks until Spring arrives on the Vernal Equinox.
This year Easter follows just three days later. I consider
Groundhog Day the final hump of winter to get over.
Indoor gardening activities still predominate, however, much of
it is in preparation for this years garden outdoors. Every year
I say I am going to clean and sharpen and tune-up my hoes,
shovels and pruners this time of year. Rust should be removed
with a wire brush and steel wool. Pruner blades and edges of
shovels and hoes should be sharpened. Then the surfaces coated
lightly with household oil. Wooden handles can be smoothed by
lightly sanding followed by a coat of linseed oil.
Seed and garden supply catalogs continue to pile up. Orders
really should be placed soon especially for seeds and plants
that are popular and may therefore be in demand.
Plan to build, rig up or purchase a cold frame to get seeds and
other plants off to a good start.
Outside there is pruning to be done and the compost pile to
turn, that is once it has thawed.
In this month’s garden calendar, entries followed by numbers in
parenthesis are the topic of InfoSource on-line messages from
the UW-Extension. To print the message scripts from your home
computer, visit the website at
http://infosource.uwex.edu/
UW-Extension gardening publications on a wide variety of
subjects are also available for printing or ordering from the
publications website at
http://cecommerce.uwex.edu/.
In addition, Wisconsin Garden Facts factsheets can be obtained
from the UW-Extension Hort Team website at
http://wihort.uwex.edu.
Visit the UW-Extension SouthEast Wisconsin Master Gardener
volunteers at their booth at the Home, Garden and Landscape Show
at the Milwaukee Sports Complex, February 22 – 24. They can help
answer your gardening questions and direct you to even more
resources. Their website is
http://milwaukee.uwex.edu/mg/.
- Use sand or cat litter rather than salt to melt ice along sidewalks and
driveways to prevent soil and plant damage. Do not use granular fertilizer
because excessive amounts of it, too, can damage plants. It also pollutes lakes
and rivers as it runs off paved surfaces and frozen ground. For this reason
never fertilize on frozen ground or over the snow.
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- If you need more space to garden, contact your county's UW-Extension office
about rental garden locations. In Milwaukee County, call (414) 290-2405.
-Prepare for starting seeds indoors by gathering supplies and equipment. The
three most crucial elements for successful seed starting are using sterile
media, supplemental light and bottom heat of about 70 degrees. Be sure
fluorescent fixtures and bulbs are compatible since the newer low-wattage tubes
will overheat in old fixtures.
- Plan to get your children into the garden this year. Start with projects
indoors like a pan of grass for their Easter baskets or oats for the cat. Start
a sweet potato or an avocado pit. If you have supplemental lighting, plant a tub
of lettuces and garlic cloves and herbs.
- With two weeks left until Valentine's Day, its time to start forcing those
spring flowering bulbs you've been chilling. The little bulbs like crocus,
hyacinth, and scilla should have received 8 weeks of cold. Larger bulbs require
12 – 14 weeks.
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- Remove built-up dust and grime from the leaves of
houseplants with a shower. Plants with large leaves can be wiped
clean by hand with a cloth or a pair of clean, soft gloves. Use
one hand on the upper surface and one below. Water works just
fine to clean and shine leaves. Some but not all leaf polish
products contain oils which will clog leaf pores.
- Start seeds for the very first vegetable crop now - onions. Keep the
foliage cutback to about 4" until time to transplant outdoors in April. Use what
you clip off in salads or soup to add some zip.
- Cloves of garlic can be planted in pots indoors to sprout for zesty seasoning.
- Sow seeds indoors for impatiens, begonias, petunias, nemesia, dusty miller,
and snapdragons.
- Fresh cut Valentine's bouquets should be placed in warm water with floral
preservative after having the stem ends re-cut. Wash vases with soap and water
every time you replace the water. Remove any foliage that is below water level
to prevent rot and clogging of stems. Place vase in a cool location (down to 35
degrees) for at least one hour or overnight so that they can re-hydrate before
bringing into room temperature.
- Drooping roses can be revived by completely submerging them in warm water and
re-cutting the stem ends while under water. Leave them in the water to
re-hydrate for a half hour before returning them to the vase.
- Start garden woodworking projects like coldframes, trellises, arbors and
benches. A makeshift but functional coldframe can be set up using a few bales of
straw on which an old wooden storm window is propped. Slide back the window to
vent heat on sunny days being certain to close it again before sundown.
- Being the end of the dormant season, now and throughout the month of March
is the best time to prune most woody landscape plants and fruit trees. You can
delay pruning birch, maple, black walnut, and elm since these tend to "bleed"
when sap starts to move again due to snow melt and thawing soil. The dripping
sap does not harm the trees but it is unsightly.
-You can also delay pruning of spring flowering plants like forsythia, lilac,
flowering almond, pussywillow, quince, cherry, Corneliancherry dogwood and
crabapple until after bloom if you can't bear to lose the flowerbuds you prune
off.
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- Otherwise, prune anyway and bring in the cut branches from these early spring
flowerers to force flower buds open indoors for your enjoyment.
- Seed of larkspur, nigella, and poppies can be sown directly in bare ground to
germinate as soon as the snow melts away.
- Keep feeding the birds until spring bloom since they have come to depend upon
you for food. Even greater success at attracting birds to your property can be
assured by providing a fresh source of water at all times. This must be kept
free of ice and available until spring thaw. Stake up a discarded Christmas tree
near a feeder to provide some protective cover but far enough away so that dogs
and cats can't hide there to ambush your feathered friends at the feeder.