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15 gardening tips for July

July means holidays, long days and (hopefully) sunny weather, giving you a chance to really enjoy your garden. In between watering, weeding and deadheading to keep everything looking its best, don’t forget to take some time to relax and admire the flowers! Here are our top 15 gardening tips for July.

Top 15 gardening tips for July

  1. Deadhead roses regularly to keep them flowering. Annual flowers like sweet peas and cosmos will also flower for months if regularly deadheaded, and they make beautiful cut flowers for the house. 

  2. Cut hardy geraniums back hard when they start to look leggy and tired, and they will produce a flush of fresh new foliage and flowers.

  3. Once irises have finished flowering, lift and divide overgrown clumps. Re-plant them with their rhizomes partly exposed so that they can be baked by the summer sun.

  4. Give lilacs their summer pruning, before next years blooms start forming

  5. Pinch out any side shoots on indeterminate tomatoes to focus the plants’ energies on producing fruit. 

Watering tomato plants

  1. Water tomatoes regularly, especially container-grown tomatoes. Keeping the moisture level in the soil consistent reduces the risk of fruit splitting.

  2. Water container plants regularly in dry weather. Use stored rainwater where possible, watering in the morning or evening to reduce evaporation. 

  3. Sow salad crops like lettuce every couple of weeks for a constant supply through summer. To reduce the risk of lettuce bolting in hot weather, provide shade for the plants in the hottest part of the day.

  4. Tomatoes, beans, courgettes, peppers, blueberries and gooseberries, will appreciate a fortnightly boost with a high-potassium liquid feed such as tomato feed, which promotes the development of flowers and fruit.

  5. Pick peas and beans regularly to keep the plants producing more fruit.

  6. Pinch out the growing tips of broad beans once the pods start to appear. This encourages bushy growth and also reduces the risk of blackfly infestations, as these pests tend to attack tender young shoots.

  7. Mound up the soil around the stems of maincrop potatoes (this is called ‘earthing up’) to stop the sunlight from reaching the tubers and turning them green. Remember, green potatoes are toxic! Harvest the first early potatoes, digging up one or two first to check whether they are big enough – if not, leave them to grow for a few more weeks.

  8. Mow the lawn regularly, raising the blades to a higher setting if the weather is dry. 

  9. Provide a mid-season fertiliser boost to lawns and container plants.

Whether it’s plants to fill the border or garden furniture for a party, you’ll find everything you need in our centre to help you get the best out of your garden this summer!

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