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Must do's for this month
Jobs that won't wait
Sow fast-maturing and late-flowering annuals, herbs and vegetables
including parsnips, early carrots and runner beans.
Harden
off summer bedding plants and plant out. Check the weather forecast
regularly and be prepared to provide temporary protection, with
newspapers or horticultural fleece, if frost is forecast.
thin
out hardy annual, vegetable and other seedlings sown outdoors.
Maintain
a programme of weeding and checking for pests and diseases.
Water
and feed plants as necessary. Pay particular attention to seedlings,
plants in containers and newly planted trees and shrubs.
Take
basal cuttings of border plants, such as lupins and delphinium,
before they develop hollow or pithy stems, at which point it is
too late for successful cuttings.
Stake
and support chrysanthemums except compact varieties and dwarf bedding.
Stop incurved and large exhibition chrysanthemums this month.
Prune
spring-flowering clematis after flowering.
Finish
planting of permanent containers so plants have the summer to establish
themselves.
Pinch
out the growing tips of bush fuschias while the plants are still
small, and check all types of tender greenhouse cucumbers and tomatoes.
Remove male flowers from cucumbers.
Prune
winter-flowering heathers. Any not pruned by the end of May should
be left until next year.
Plant
onion sets as soon as possible.
Earth
up early and maincrop potatoes; protect foliage if frost is forecast.
Cut
lawns with naturalised bulbs growing in them. Keep mower blades
high
 
Information in this section comes from Reader's
Digest New
Gardening Year - a month-by-month guide to success in
your garden
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Planting
guide with Avon Mill Garden Centre
May is a lovely time of the year. Signs of
summer are everywhere, days are warmer and longer and more flowers
are in bloom, adding colour and scent to the garden. Summer bedding
plants are available from shops and garden centres and, if you have
grown your own bedding plants, you will be anxious to get them planted
outdoors - both to make space in the greenhouse and to reduce the
amount of time you spend watering and feeding them.
You should, however, resist the temptation to plant out tender annuals
during a spell of fine, summer weather at the beginning of the month.
Be guided by past experience as to the likelihood of late frosts
in your area. In favourable parts of the country, such as the south
and south-west, it may be reasonable to take the risk and plant
out at the beginning of the month. But even in those mild areas,
the middle of the month is a safer choice.
In cold regions wait until the end of the month or even delay planting
out until the beginning of June. If you are in any doubt as to when
to plant out, and you live in a town, be guided by the local parks
- and plant out summer bedding when they do. They will be basing
their timing on many years of local experience.
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