As the trees turn rich shades of gold, red and orange, it’s time to harvest the last of your summer crops, prepare your garden for winter and start planning for spring. And to get you started, here are our top 15 gardening tips for October.
October gardening tips
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Cut back herbaceous perennials as they die back, if you wish. Or leave them standing until late winter to provide homes for overwintering insects.
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Reduce bush roses and buddleias by around a third to protect them against damage from strong winter winds.
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If they have grown into a good-sized clump, lift and divide herbaceous perennials like cranesbill geraniums, daylilies and agapanthus. Tease clumps apart by hand or use two garden forks back-to-back to lever them apart. Cut woody roots with a knife or the sharp edge of a spade.
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Prune summer-fruiting raspberries, cutting all this year’s fruited canes to ground level and leaving the new canes, which will bear fruit next year.
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Harvest the last of your French and runner beans, then cut the plants down to ground level, leaving the roots in the ground to release their stored nitrogen.
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Pick green tomatoes and let them ripen indoors, placing them in a paper bag together with a banana to speed up the process. Check the bag regularly and remove any tomatoes which are going rotten.
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October is an excellent time to plant new trees and shrubs while the soil is still warm and the air is cooling, giving the roots time to settle in over winter, ready for next spring.
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Sow hardy pea seeds outdoors and cover the ground with netting to stop mice from digging them up. A layer of prickly holly leaves over the seeds also provides good protection.
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Plant spring-flowering bulbs like daffodils, irises and crocuses this month, but wait until November to plant tulips.
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Plant up pots with winter bedding like cyclamen and violas to give colour through the cold months.
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Aerate and scarify your lawn, and give it a low-nitrogen autumn feed. Now’s a good time to fix bare patches by sowing grass seed.
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Lift dahlia, begonia and gladiolus bulbs in cold areas and store them somewhere dry over winter. If you have a free-draining soil, you may leave the bulbs in the ground and lay a thick mulch (around 5-7cm) over them.
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Move half-hardy plants into a frost-free spot like a greenhouse or a windowsill indoors.
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Raise pots on pot feet to prevent them from becoming waterlogged and frozen over winter.
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Sweep up fallen leaves and collect them to make leaf mould. If you don’t have space for a leaf pile, put the leaves into black bin bags, make a few holes in the bags and put them somewhere out of sight. In a year or two, the leaves will break down into leaf mould, a fantastic soil conditioner.
As you can see, October is a great month for gardening. Please ask our staff for advice, if needed. We have everything you need for your garden this autumn, so visit our centre soon and see what’s in store.