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Autumn Garden Tips

Autumn is an excellent time of year for gardening. Taking the time to plan and prepare your garden now can provide you with amazing results later. The Centenary Landscaping Supplies team shares their favourite autumn garden tips to help you optimise your results.

Autumn Tasks

No list of autumn garden tips would be complete without discussing trees and shrubs.

It’s a great time for planting container grown trees and shrubs in your garden. There should be plenty of time to get them established before the harsh, hot summer returns.

In many areas, seasonal rain makes conditions perfect for transplanting evergreen shrubs and lifting and dividing your perennials such as agapanthus, violets and bearded iris.

Seeding

In the shaded areas plant primroses, polyanthus and cineraria for touches of colour.

Harvest the last of your summer vegies then get some fresh soil, compost and manure to replenish the beds before replanting. Plant strawberries, peas, broad beans, silver beet, lettuce, spring onions and garlic.

Sweet peas are just as popular now as ever, plant seeds in autumn into a sunny corner of your yard. Well drained soil is essential with plenty of compost, manure and dolomite. If space is limited, there are dwarf sweet peas suitable for pots, check out the ‘Bijou’ variety.

Flowering 

Roses are at their peak now, so grasp the opportunity to get out in your garden and admire their beauty and scent. This means now is obviously the best time to visit open rose gardens, just to take in their beauty or perhaps sniff out a few new varieties for your own backyard!

The Mt Cootha Botanical Gardens is home to a fantastic Rose Garden as well as New Farm Park. Meanwhile, now is the time to treat your roses for various fungal diseases such as black spot or powdery mildew. A simple recipe for this is to mix one part full-cream milk with nine parts water, spray the mixture over the foliage weekly or after rain.

New Farm Park roses in bloom.

Trim Time

Prune your buddleja, French lavender, geraniums, abelia, hebe and hedges this month.

Deciduous fruit trees can be pruned once harvesting has ended. Add the cuttings, along with plentiful autumn leaves to your compost bin. Lawn clippings, shredded paper and non-meat kitchen scraps can also be added, and it will turn into nutritious and free fertiliser!

 
Handy Products for Your Garden

Based on the tips above, here’s a round-up of just a few products to get your garden thriving. We recommend using the specifically designed UltraGrow range of soils, bio stimulants and fertilisers. The liquid ranges are perfect for foliar spraying.

Don’t forget to tag us (@centenarylandsc) in your photos /videos of your growing journey – we’d love to see how your project goes!

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