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- Spray Bonide
All-Season Spray
on hemlock to control woolly
adelgid.
- Spruce
up the landscape by planting
Fall Pansies, Flowering
Cabbage & Kale, Garden
Mums, Fall-Blooming Perennials
as well as Trees and
Shrubs.
- Test your
lawn pH to determine if you
need to apply lime this season.
A 50 lb. bag of Lime
will raise the pH about .5
per 1000 square feet of turf.
- Pick up
your Spring Flowering
Bulbs like tulips,
daffodils, crocus, hyacinths,
snowdrops and more! An Auger
for the drill will also help
make planting easier.
- Plant cool-season
salad greens (arugula, corn
salad, lettuce, radishes and
spinach) in cold frames.
- Apply Superphosphate
now to coax stubborn plants
into bloom next year.
- Aerate,
re-seed and apply Fall
Lawn Food to the
lawn. Keep grass seed damp;
water every day if necessary.
You will also want to check
for grubs. Increased activities
of skunks, raccoons and moles
as well as brown patches that
peel back easily are an indication
of grub activity. Apply granular
Sevin to
control the grubs as well
as chinch bugs and sod webworm.
- Treat houseplants
with Systemic Granules
and Concern Insect
Killing Soap now
to get rid of any insects
before bringing them into
the house prior to the first
frost.
- Clean out
garden ponds and pools. Cover
with Pond Netting
before the leaves start falling.
- Plant bulbs.
Fertilize with Espoma
Bulb-Tone and water
in well.
- Divide
daylilies and spring-blooming
perennials, including iris
and peonies. Don’t be
tempted to prune your spring
flowering shrubs like forsythia,
azaleas, camellia, holly,
lilac, rhododendron, spiraea
or viburnum - you’ll
destroy next year’s
buds.
- Rake leaves
from the lawn and lower the
mower blade. Check your compost
pile. Now is a good time to
add Concern Bio Activator
to help break down brown leaves
and lawn clippings.
- Dig up
summer-flowering bulbs, such
as dahlias, cannas, tuberous
begonias, caladiums and gladiolus
after the frost kills the
top growth. Treat them with
Bulb Dust,
pack them in Peat
Moss, and store them
in a ventilated area for winter.
- Fertilize
your trees with Jobes
Tree Spikes after
the leaves fall. Fertilize
azaleas, rhododendron, and
evergreens with Holly-Tone
and other shrubs with Plant-Tone.
Spray hemlock again with Bonide
All-Season Spray Oil.
- Set up
bird feeders.
- Clean up
and destroy diseased rose
leaves and debris surrounding
shrubs and perennials. Mound
10 - 12 inches of dirt around
roses to protect from winter
damage. After the ground freezes,
cover roses with mulch or
straw.
- Remove
annuals, roots and all, and
add to your compost pile,
but do not add any diseased
material to it.
- Cut back
perennials unless they feature
ornamental seed heads and
Fertilize with 5-10-5.
Prune long raspberry and rose
canes back to a height of
three feet. Clean up your
beds and gardens to avoid
harboring insects and diseases
over the winter.
- Pot hardy
spring bulbs (anemone, crocus,
daffodil, hyacinth, ranunculus
and tulip) and place in a
cold frame or cool garage
(40 degrees) or sink into
the ground and mulch. Keep
evenly moist.
- Update
garden records, noting successes
and failures, gaps in planting,
future planting and landscape
changes.
- Water all
landscape plants well and
mulch before
the winter cold sets in.
- Spray evergreens,
azaleas, rhododendron, boxwood
and rose canes with Wilt
Pruf for protection
against wind and cold weather.
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Bonide
All Season Spray
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Sevin
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Concern
Insect Killing Soap
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Espoma
Bulb-tone
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Concern
Bio-Activator
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Jobes
Tree Spikes
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Espoma
Plant-tone
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Wilt
Pruf
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