Dividing perennial plants. After several years, many perennials need to be divided for better blooming. This means removing the plant from the ground, cutting the roots into viable clumps, discarding any diseased or woody roots (usually at the center of the original root clump), and replanting in the afternoon. Water well after replanting.
Late afternoon or evening is the best time for planting. New transplants will get off to a good start if they have the cool of the night to become used to their new homes. Planting on a cloudy day is the next best choice. Be sure to water them well. If the next several days are sunny, theyd appreciate some shadingshingles, sides of cut-up milk cartons, or any temporary material-- will do just fine. Vegetable tips for early spring: For gourmet salads, thickly sow mixed varieties of lettuce and cut with scissors one-half inch above the ground when the plants are three inches tall. They'll re-sprout for another harvest or two. Swiss chard planted now will produce greens for salads and cooking from July to November. Shorter, stouter, or "half-long" carrots with strong tops are easiest to grow and harvest in our heavy soils. Choose a regular cabbage variety; early varieties produce smaller heads that tend to burst. Take heed: Soak cut daffodils and tulips in lukewarm water for one-half hour before arranging them with other cut flowers. Freshly cut, they emit a substance that is toxic to other flowers. Foil burglars: Plant gooseberry, barberry, or other thorny bushes in front of windows.
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Contact Us | Disclaimer | Equal Opportunity © CSU/Denver County Extension Master Gardener 2010888 E. Iliff Avenue, Denver, CO 80210(720) 913-5278E-Mail: denvermg@colostate.edu Date last revised: 01/05/2010
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