Garden Tasks for July in Acadiana - By Dan Weintritt and friends
- ANPP Volunteers
- Jul 5
- 3 min read
Adapted from Month-by-Month Gardening in Louisiana by Dan Gill
Your time should be shifting from doing to observing. Insect activity should be a
joy for the native gardener. Go find a patch of mountain mint and see if you can
count the dozens of species of pollinators hungrily buzzing around its flowers.
Observe which spots in the garden are not thriving, weeds are taking over,
there is not a lot blooming, etc. Think of plants that are thriving in other parts
of the yard. Make a plan to propagate and move more of these summer
performers into other areas.
Plants that are suffering badly, especially from insect pests or fungus, might
best be removed completely, before their problem starts to spread to other
plants.
Weeds that were not eradicated earlier are at their height of vigor
(bermudagrass and such), and may not be able to be pulled by hand.
Glyphosate, when used properly, is perfectly safe to use in spot treatments to
stop a rampant invasive from wrecking your garden. It works best on hot,
sunny days, so now's a great time to kill an unwanted visitor with a single
application.
Those that did not trim back their ironweed or goldenrod in June can do so
now. Trimming these plants in July will allow them to bloom on 4' tall stalks in
fall. This is not necessary for very large and mature gardens, or open prairie,
but trimming keeps the neighbors happy if you live in a neighborhood.
Seed continues to be ready for harvest on early summer bloomers.
Typically, seedpods are ready to harvest when they are just dry and papery, 4-
8 weeks after bloom. Label seeds in envelopes, and include botanical name of
plant, location seed was harvested, date of harvest, and location the plant was
originally sourced. Consult a gardening book or a reliable internet source on
how to store. Every species is different.
Spring blooming has ceased and fall blooming is still six weeks away.
Consider the few wonderful summer bloomers (native Hibiscus, Salvia,
Canna, Milkweed), and consider adding more. Also, think of how plants with
interesting form and texture (palmetto, grasses, yucca, Opuntia, Manfreda,
wonderful strappy bulbs like spider lily) can liven up the sea of green in
summer.
Heavy rains from hurricanes or other storms can be a problem at this time of
year. Make sure your landscaping is not interfering with structural drainage for
your street. Look out for washouts of dirt and use mulch after storms. This will
mostly be a problem in new beds. Be sure to replace lost compost and mulch
around rootballs. The next scorching, sunny day is not far away, and tender
new roots will not be happy if they're exposed.
During extended droughts, newly planted trees and shrubs should receive
additional water. They will not give signs of stress until it is too late, unlike
herbaceous plants, which can wilt and recover. Run a soaker hose or a garden
hose at a trickle around the rootball for 20-45 minutes once a week.
Summer is a great time to develop a landscape plan that can be
implemented in the coming fall and winter, the best planting seasons. Develop
your own landscape plan or hire someone to create a plan compatible with
your vision of a native plant paradise.
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