You Grow Girl™

Preparing Your Garden For Winter
Zesty




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Next comes cleaning up. Oh the bounty a summer leaves behind: newspapers, coffee cups, potato chip bags, bus transfers - but hey, it's certainly a step up from the syringe and dead rat I found three years ago. And a friendly reminder, my fellows in foliage: please wear gloves to protect yourself from any bacteria or germs.

After the garbage is cleaned up, this leaves, well the leaves. I've encountered two schools of thought on this. There are some who don't bother raking up leaves and others who do it religiously. I think what kind of garden you have dictates what you should do.

A bigger garden with a lot of grass or a garden with smaller trees won't be any worse for wear if leaves are not raked up. My garden, on the other hand is a 9' x 11' plot with a hundred-year-old tree on the west side. It gets absolutely drowned in leaves every autumn. Raking up these leaves prevents the acidity of the soil increasing. This is something I want to avoid, as my garden had been neglected when I got my hands on it. The soil was extremely acidic due to years of wood chips sitting there with layer after layer of leaves not being cleaned up.

So evaluate your own situation and act accordingly.

cedar chip mulchSince my garden has a layer of cedar mulch, I didn't rake the leaves. I swept them up with a broom, as raking would have disturbed the mulch. I don't know why, but I've always thought that would make a good name for a band: MULCH.

Anyway, how did I enter the world of mulching? Well last year, my landlord came to visit from Vancouver. He decided that a layer of mulch in the garden would make the front look nicer and help sell the house. I suppose according to his reasoning, the rotting porch and eaves trough hanging by a thread would be overlooked if the garden was pretty.

At first, I have to admit that I resented this. I know it's TECHNICALLY his garden, but it FEELS like mine if you know what I mean. But it ended up being a nice bit of serendipity. My landlord put the mulch down for aesthetics, but it actually did wonders for the garden over last winter.

My garden bloomed sooner and longer through the season. Also, a rose bush I had long given up for dead and just hadn't gotten around to removing started growing again. Weeds were also at a premium. And to top it all off, the house ended up not getting sold, and I was not thrown into the unmitigated hell currently referred to in more polite circles as "Toronto's rental housing crisis." Let's hear it for mulch gang!

So consider a layer of mulch for added protection, over your entire flower bed, or built up around certain plants. I wouldn't put down soil until spring, as the erosion over the winter is too great.

Where was I? Ah yes, leaves. Once they were removed, I did get a rake and pile the mulch up around my rose bushes as an additional bit of winter protection. Some people use soil for this or wrap them in burlap. Some gardeners do this for their small bushes, young trees, or any other low-lying plant they would like to protect as well. This is the first year I have done it. The neighbors two doors down do it every year and I have to admit that their roses have a bit more pizzazz, so I'm giving it a shot to see what the effects are on my garden.

the cleaned and pruned garden The last bit of winter preparation is to turn off the water to your hose tap. If you don't, there's a good chance the water in the pipe will expand as it freezes and your pipe will explode.

And that's basically it. Not too complicated a task that can yield wonderful results. Once finished, you can crack out the hot chocolate, light a candle, throw on that Paul Anka CD you have but won't admit to and relax. Rest content with the knowledge that come spring, your garden will thank you for making its winter's rest a bit more comfortable.


Zesty aka Allison Dick, has been an avid gardener for about four years. To read more about her gardening exploits check out her journal.

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