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Know your plants, so you can give them customized care. By Tony P. Wrenn Date published: 10/7/2006
"WINTERIZE" MAY BE a Winterizing the garden is nothing like winterizing the family car, however, for most of the work of garden winterizing can be done by the gardener, at home. Still, a little help from friends is always welcome, just as long as they check with the gardener before beginning work. It helps, if one is to work in the garden, to know what is planted where. Lilies, easy to destroy, lurk here and there, though there may be little or no foliage above ground to indicate their presence. Slicing them into pieces with a gardening tool does them no good, and uprooting them, unsliced, requires replanting, which is not toil one needs, considering all the other work waiting. Daffodils, tulips, ornamental onions and other bulbs lie just below the soil surface, hidden and vulnerable to destruction when one is working above them. Naked ladies, which tend to produce massive bulb clumps in a fairly short period of time, are easily disturbed, and cutting through one of those, depending on the place and seriousness of the wound, probably means the lady will not recover. Other plants, such as Virginia bluebells, whose above-ground foliage disappears shortly after they blossom in the spring, can be easily dispatched unless one is paying attention to where they grow. Bluebells spread and form mats that welcome spring as few other plants can, yet if one tries to plant over them one courts disaster. Clearing away weedy overgrowth and putting down a layer of mulch is about all one can do to their beds, but they need that.
Date published: 10/7/2006
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