December Gardening Tips

Planning:
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Use garden notes, photos and sketches to assess areas which need plants
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Determine types and quantities of plants to order
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Begin to order plants from seed and nursery catalogues
Chores and Maintenance:
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After ground freezes, mulch perennial and bulb planting beds. The mulch
will prevent heaving during the alternate freeze/thaw cycle
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Tie and support evergreen shrubs to avoid breakage from winter snow
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Continue to provide burlap windbreaks for boxwood and broad-leaved evergreens
unitl ground freezes
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Complete protection of trees from mouse damage with wire mesh trunk guards
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Continue to protect shrubs from deer with burlap or netting
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Avoid the use of salt to melt snow as it is toxic to most plants. Use sawdust,
sand or cat litter
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Keep bird feeders filled throughout winter
Pruning/Fertilizing:
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Prune evergreen branches to use in holiday decorating
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Continue to rejuvenate overgrown shrubs as weather permits, until new growth
begins in spring
Indoors:
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Keep newly purchased Christmas trees in a bucket of water in a cool place
-
Set up Christmas tree in a reservoir stand. Cut on a slant about 1" above
existing cut for optimum water absorption
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Be sure to keep reservoir filled and place tree in the coolest part of
the room
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Sterilize the tree stand with a solution of boiling water, vinegar, and
household bleach after use
-
When buying houseplants in winter be sure to wrap them well for the trip
home. This prevents the foliage from freezing and protects tropicals from
drafts
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Give houseplants as much light as possible as days grow shorter
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Hold off on fertilizing indoor plants until spring
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Provide houseplants with increased humidity; mist often or place plants
over a tray of moist pebbles
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Continue to plant prepared bulbs for indoor forcing
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As houseplants grow more slowly during winter, increase the time between
waterings but do not cut back on the amount of water
-
On frigid nights protect indoor plants from freezing; move them away from
the glass or cover glass with thick newspaper or cardboard
- Clean leaves of large and smooth- leaved house plants like dracaena,
philodendron, ficus etc.

* These gardening tips are applicable
for the southeastern New York region - USDA Plant Hardiness Zones 6a and
6b which include New York City, northern New Jersey, Rockland county, Westchester
county, southern Connecticut and parts of Long Island. Plant hardiness
zones refer to geographic areas where the growing season of plants is determined
by the time of killing frosts in the spring and fall. If you live in a
more southerly plant hardiness zone, you can start gardening earlier in
the season or in more northerly zones, you can start later. Even within
zones, climatic factors such as altitude, proximity to water, wind exposure,
winter sun exposure and snow cover contribute to the existence of different
"microclimates" and can influence plant adaptability.
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