Here are a few FAQs for the start of the home
gardening and landscape season.
Q) What is the best time to apply crabgrass preventer?
A) Crabgrass seed will not germinate until the soil temperature
reaches 55 degrees and stays there for at least 7 days. Last week,
soil temperatures were just hitting 48 to 50 degrees. Bare and
dark-colored soils warm quicker than sandy and covered soils (lawns
and mulched areas). Crabgrass preventers put down too early will
break down long before crabgrass seed stops germinating. Put down
too late and you will still see crabgrass. Timing is everything.
Q) What is the best time to start apple tree sprays?
A) We are very close right now. To protect foliage and later the
developing fruits, sprays start as soon as you see what we call
"green tip." As the protective bud scales begin to soften from
spring rains, the foliage buds (and quickly to follow, the flower
buds) start to push out. The green tip we see represents all the
leaves for the season.
Keeping the leaves covered from green tip to fully expanded and
beyond will prevent Apple Scab and Cedar Apple Rust fungal diseases,
which damage the leaves. If you are unclear about "green tip," here
is a situation where starting too early is not a bad approach.
Starting after the leaves are already infected may help any leaves
that show up later, the infection will remain season long. The part
to remember is the leaves produce the resources needed to: 1) create
this year's apples, and 2) create next year's foliage and flower
buds. Of all our tree fruits, apples are the most challenging.
Timing is everything. [to top of second
column] |
Q) What is the best time to start the vegetable garden from
seed?
A) Vegetables have a range of soil temperatures they prefer. If the garden bed
is in good condition already, the earliest leafy vegetables are leaf lettuce,
kale, and spinach.
Others include onion and peas. Closer to our average frost-free date (AVFD,
anywhere from April 25 through May 5) beets, carrots, chard and radishes work. A
good way to get more out of the garden is to sow carrots and radishes together
in the same row.
Radishes come up early, marking the row and are harvested long before carrots
need the space. Once we hit the magical AVFD, tender vegetables like snap beans
and summer squash are sown.
Lastly, we have vegetables that absolutely need warm soils. These are a lot of
our other vine crops like, cucumbers, melons, watermelons (if you are up to the
challenge), and our winter squashes harvested in late summer or fall. So what
about tomatoes and peppers? We normally put these in as transplants.
Tomatoes go in with the tender vegetables and peppers with the warm soil group.
We lose at least 2 weeks of growing if we plant the tomatoes at the right time
for peppers.
Do you have questions about your garden or landscape? Call our Master Gardener
help desk at 217-782-4617 and get answers, advice and tips to make your lawn or
garden the envy of the neighborhood.
[Richard Hentschel, Extension
Educator, Horticulture]
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