Time To Put The Yard To Bed

Use these last days of fine weather to put your lawn and garden to bed for the winter.

• Giving the yard a good cleanup in the fall means less work when spring rolls around.

Rake Leaves• Continue to cut your lawn into the fall, but keep the length at three inches or so and bag the clippings.

• Apply a high-quality fall lawn fertilizer before mid-November. If weeds are a problem, try a fall lawn food 10-5-20 plus weeder.

• When the last of the leaves has fallen, give the lawn a thorough raking to remove thatch.

• Clean up garden beds, throw annuals into the composter and cut back perennials to about five inches from the ground. Apply a five- to six-inch layer of mulch comprised of straw or leaves.

• Use leaves to create a leaf mould top dressing for gardens next spring. Place shredded leaves in garbage bags with a few handfuls of soil, moisten and close. Shake the bags once a week. Dig the compound into the soil in spring or use as a top dressing.

• Turn the soil to aerate it and prevent compaction over the winter.

• Hill up the base of your rose bushes with top soil, up to 12 inches.

• Before the ground freezes, give the soil around evergreens a thorough soaking. This will provide them with the extra moisture they require to survive the winter.

Courtesy: Homeservice Club